Preparation and Binding Evaluation of Histamine-Imprinted Microspheres via Conventional Thermal and RAFT-Mediated Free-Radical Polymerization
Author(s) -
Edwin F. Romano,
Regina C. So,
Scott W. Donne,
Clovia I. Holdsworth
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.6b00144
Subject(s) - raft , microsphere , reversible addition−fragmentation chain transfer polymerization , polymerization , radical polymerization , chemistry , histamine , polymer chemistry , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , polymer , medicine , pharmacology , engineering
Elevated histamine (HTM) levels are closely linked to food poisoning as well as to pathophysiological allergic diseases. In this study, HTM-imprinted, solution-processable microspheres were prepared via high-dilution conventional thermal polymerization (CTP) and controlled radical polymerization (CRP) using ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (80 or 90 wt %) and methacrylic acid at 60 °C in acetonitrile and evaluated as recognition materials for sensing applications. The polymers were selective to HTM in binding studies, cross-rebinding, and competitive binding assays against the HTM analogues histidine, imidazole, and tryptamine. The selective binding capacity was significantly higher with CTP-80 (on the basis of mass: 21.0 μmol/g and surface area: 8.08 × 10 -2 μmol/m 2 ) than that with both CTP-90 (8.47 μmol/g, 4.49 × 10 -2 μmol/m 2 ) and CRP-80 (9.00 μmol/g, 1.19 × 10 -2 μmol/m 2 ).
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