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Magnetite Nanoparticles with High Affinity Toward Target Protein for Efficient and Facile Bio‐Separation
Author(s) -
Wang Yafei,
Zhang Yaojing,
Zhao Yibo,
Zhao Zhuo,
Yao Jia,
Zou Lei,
Zhang Yan,
Guan Ying,
Zhang Yongjun
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.388
H-Index - 100
ISSN - 2198-3844
DOI - 10.1002/advs.202413605
Subject(s) - molecular imprinting , bovine serum albumin , adsorption , nanoparticle , polymerization , monomer , magnetite nanoparticles , chemistry , imprinting (psychology) , chemical engineering , selectivity , combinatorial chemistry , selective adsorption , chromatography , materials science , magnetic nanoparticles , nanotechnology , polymer , organic chemistry , catalysis , biochemistry , gene , engineering
Abstract Magnetite nanoparticles (Fe 3 O 4 NPs) with molecular recognition capabilities offer significant potential for biomedical applications, yet existing surface protein imprinting methods often suffer from low efficiency. Herein, a surface enzyme‐mediated polymerization strategy is exploited for surface imprinting of bovine serum albumin (BSA) onto Fe 3 O 4 NPs. This method, compatible with all vinyl monomers and operable under mild conditions, enables imprinting at high monomer concentrations while preventing nanoparticle agglomeration. Notably, increasing the pre‐polymerization solution concentration enhances the pre‐assembly of functional monomers and template molecules, thereby improving imprinting efficiency. Furthermore, replacing conventional crosslinkers with a polyglutamic acid‐based peptide crosslinker introduces a pH‐responsive helix‐coil transition, allowing complete template removal under mild conditions and increasing the adsorption capacity and imprinting factor to 139.8 mg g⁻¹ and 10.36, respectively. The resulting BSA‐imprinted Fe₃O₄ NPs exhibits high selectivity, robustness, and rapid adsorption kinetics while maintaining strong magnetic responsiveness for easy separation. These features allows for the selective extraction of BSA from bovine fetal serum, demonstrating the potential of this approach for biomedical applications, particularly in bioseparations.

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