New Journal - Molecular Imprinting (opens in new window)

mips logo Go to mipdatabase.com Search this site:
Custom(Search)

    
Reference type: Journal
Authors: Hua KC, Zhang L, Zhang ZH, Guo Y, Guo TY
Article Title: Surface hydrophilic modification with a sugar moiety for a uniform-sized polymer molecularly imprinted for phenobarbital in serum.
Publication date: 2011
Journal: Acta Biomaterialia
Volume: 7
Issue: (8)
Page numbers: 3086-3093.
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2011.05.006
Alternative URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1742706111001991

Abstract: A uniform-sized polymer molecularly imprinted for phenobarbital, which is surface modified by a sugar moiety, has been prepared through a two-step swelling polymerization method using polystyrene beads as seeds, phenobarbital as the template, 4-vinylpyridine as a functional monomer, ethylene glycol dimethacrylate as a cross-linker and 2-O-meth-acryloyloxyethoxyl-(2,3,4,6- tetra-O-acetyl-β-d-galactopyranosyl)-(1-4)-2,3,6-tri-O-acetyl-β-d-glucopyranoside as a surface-modifying glycomonomer, respectively. After deprotecting the glycopolymer, a surface sugar moiety-modified, hydrophilic, molecularly imprinted polymer for phenobarbital (glyco-MIP) was obtained. The resulting polymer beads were packed into a stainless steel column to evaluate their chromatographic characteristics by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Good selectivity for phenobarbital was obtained with the glyco-MIP compared to the unmodified molecularly imprinted polymer, which revealed that the recognition sites of phenobarbital were unchanged with sugar moiety surface modification. Furthermore, bovine serum albumin was almost completely recovered from the glyco-MIP column, which indicates that the glyco-MIP materials can be used to separate and analyze drugs in complex samples, such as biological samples. The results of pretreatment with and analysis of phenobarbital in serum suggest that this material can be used to analyze phenobarbital in serum through a pretreatment and reverse-phase HPLC analysis process
Template and target information: phenobarbital
Author keywords: molecular imprinting, Hydrophilic modification, phenobarbital, Glycopolymer

Featured products

 

MI cryptic logo postcards postcard

 

T-shirt with atrazine ball and stick model

 

MI cryptic logo keychain