4.8 Article

Fabrication of Surface Protein-Imprinted Nanoparticles Using a Metal Chelating Monomer via Aqueous Precipitation Polymerization

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 49, Pages 27188-27196

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b07946

Keywords

protein imprinting surf-ace imprinting nanoparticles; metal coordination; His-exposed proteins; aqueous precipitation polymerization; reversible physical cross-links

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21074061, 21544006]
  2. PCSIRT [IRT1257]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin [15JCYBJC47400]

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Molecular imprinting is a promising way for constructing artificial protein recognition materials, but it has been challenged by difficulties such as restricted biomacromolecule transfer in the cross-linked polymer networks, and reduced template-monomer interactions that are due to the required aqueous media. Herein, we propose a strategy for imprinting of histidine (His)-exposed proteins by combining previous approaches such as surface imprinting over nanostructures, utilization of metal coordination interactions, and adoption of aqueous precipitation polymerization capable of forming reversible physical crosslinks. With lysozyme as a model template bearing His residues, imprinted polymer nanoshells were grafted over vinyl-modified nanoparticles by aqueous precipitation copolymerization of a Cu2+ chelating monomer with a temperature-responsive monomer carried out at 37 degrees C, above the volume phase-transition temperature (VPTT) of the final copolymer. The imprinted nanoshells showed significant temperature sensitivity and the template removal could be facilitated by swelling of the imprinted layers at 4 degrees C, below the VPTT. The resultant core-shell imprinted nanoparticles exhibited strikingly high rebinding selectivity against a variety of nontemplate proteins. An imprinting factor up to 22.7 was achieved, which is among the best values reported for protein imprinting, and a rather high specific binding capacity of 67.3 mg/g was obtained. Moreover, this approach was successfully extended to preliminary imprinting of hemoglobin, another protein with accessible His. Therefore, it may be a versatile method for fabrication of high-performance surface-imprinted nanoparticles toward His-exposed proteins.

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