Chemically modified macromolecules were assembled with adsorptive trypsin in mesoporous silica foams (MCFs) to establish covalent linkage. Effects of catalytic properties and stability of immobilized trypsin were examined. The addition of chemically modified protein (BSA) and polysaccharide (ficoll) to the immobilized trypsin exhibited high coupled yield (above 90%) and relative activities (174.5% and 175.9%, respectively), showing no protein leaching after incubating for 10 h in buffers. They showed broader pH and temperature profiles, while the half life of
thermal stability of BSA-modified preparation at 50℃ increased to 1.3 and 2.3 times of unmodified and free trypsin, respectively. The modified trypsin in aqueous-organic solvents exhibited 100% activity after 6 h at 50 ℃. The kinetic parameters of trypsin preparations and suitable pore diameter of MCFs warranted compatibility of covalent modification for substrate transmission. The covalent crowding modification for immobilized trypsin in nanopores establishes suitable and accessible microenvironment and renders possibility of biological application.