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Surface-modified multifunctional MIP nanoparticles

journal contribution
posted on 2015-10-28, 14:10 authored by Ewa Moczko, Alessandro Poma, Antonio Guerreiro, Isabel Perez de Vargas Sansalvador, Sarah Caygil, Francesco Canfarotta, Michael J. Whitcombe, Sergey Piletsky
The synthesis of core–shell molecularly imprinted polymer nanoparticles (MIP NPs) has been performed using a novel solid-phase approach on immobilised templates. The same solid phase also acts as a protective functionality for high affinity binding sites during subsequent derivatisation/shell formation. This procedure allows for the rapid synthesis, controlled separation and purification of high-affinity materials, with each production cycle taking just 2 hours. The aim of this approach is to synthesise uniformly sized imprinted materials at the nanoscale which can be readily grafted with various polymers without affecting their affinity and specificity. For demonstration purposes we grafted anti-melamine MIP NPs with coatings which introduce the following surface characteristics: high polarity (PEG methacrylate); electro-activity (vinylferrocene); fluorescence (eosin acrylate); thiol groups (pentaerythritol tetrakis(3-mercaptopropionate)). The method has broad applicability and can be used to produce multifunctional imprinted nanoparticles with potential for further application in the biosensors, diagnostics and biomedical fields and as an alternative to natural receptors.

History

Citation

Nanoscale, 2013,5, pp. 3733-3741

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nanoscale

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

issn

2040-3364

eissn

2040-3372

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2015-10-28

Publisher version

http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2013/NR/c3nr00354j#!divAbstract

Language

en

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