Well-defined biological sample-compatible molecularly
imprinted polymer microspheres by combining RAFT polymerization and thiol-epoxy
coupling chemistry
Ma, YJ (Ma, Yujuan)[ 1,2,3 ] ; Gao, JF (Gao, Jianfeng)[ 1 ] ; Zheng, CG (Zheng, Congguang)[ 2,3 ] ; Zhang, HQ (Zhang, Huiqi)[ 2,3 ]
JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B, 2019, 7(15): 2474-2483
DOI: 10.1039/c9tb00056a
Abstract
Molecularly
imprinted polymers (MIPs) capable of selectively recognizing small organic
analytes in complex biological samples hold great promise in many real-world
bioanalytical and biomedical applications, but development of such advanced
synthetic receptors remains a challenging task. Herein, a facile and highly
efficient new approach to obtaining well-defined complex biological
sample-compatible MIP microspheres is developed by combining RAFT
polymerization and thiol-epoxy coupling chemistry. Its proof-of-principle has
been demonstrated by the first synthesis of propranolol-imprinted polymer
microspheres with surface epoxy groups (briefly MIP-EP) via the combined use of
reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) precipitation
polymerization and surface-initiated RAFT polymerization and their subsequent
coupling reaction with a hydrophilic macromolecular thiol (i.e.,
thiol-terminated poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PHEMA-SH)). MIP-EP proved
to show good propranolol recognition ability in an organic solvent but not in
aqueous solution. The coupling reaction between PHEMA-SH and MIP-EP readily led
to MIP microspheres with densely grafted PHEMA brushes, which greatly enhanced
the surface hydrophilicity of MIP particles and transformed water-incompatible
MIP-EP particles into biological sample-compatible ones (i.e., the resulting
hydrophilic MIP microspheres exhibited specific template binding almost as good
as they showed in the organic solvent and high template selectivity in
biological samples including undiluted pure milk and pure bovine serum). In
sharp contrast, the simple ring-opening of the epoxy groups on MIP-EP particles
by using perchloric acid (following a previously reported method for obtaining
water-compatible MIPs) only provided MIPs with propranolol recognition ability
in pure water instead of in the complex biological samples.