4.6 Article

High-capacity thermo-responsive magnetic molecularly imprinted polymers for selective extraction of curcuminoids

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 1354, Issue -, Pages 1-8

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2014.05.040

Keywords

Molecularly imprinted polymers; Thermo-responsiveness; Magnetic separation; Curcuminoid; Natural product

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21275163]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Hunan Province, China [201292006, 2014RS4004]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2014M550426]
  4. Postdoctoral Science Foundation of Central South University
  5. Shenghua Yuying project of Central South University

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Thermo-responsive magnetic molecularly imprinted polymers (TMMIPs) for selective recognition of curcuminoids with high capacity and selectivity have firstly been developed. The resulting TMMIPs were characterized by TEM, FT-IR, TGA, VSM and UV, which indicated that TMMIPs showed thermo-responsiveness [lower critical solution temperature (LCST) at 33.71 degrees C] and rapid magnetic separation (5 s). The polymerization, adsorption and release conditions were optimized in detail to obtain the highest binding capacity, selectivity and release ratio. We found that the adopted thermo-responsive monomer [N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAm)] could be considered not only as inert polymer backbone for thermo-responsiveness but also as functional co-monomers combination with basic monomer (4-VP) for more specific binding sites when ethanol was added in binding solution. The maximum adsorption capacity with highest selectivity of curcumin was 440.3 mu g/g (1.93 times that on MMIPs with no thermosensitivity) at 45 degrees C (above LCST) in 20% (v/v) ethanol solution on shrunk TMMIPs, and the maximum release proportion was about 98% at 20 degrees C (below LCST) in methanol acetic acid (9/1, v/v) solution on swelled TMMIPs. The adsorption process between curcumin and TMMIPs followed Langumuir adsorption isotherm and pseudo-first-order reaction kinetics. The prepared TMMIPs also showed high reproducibility (RSD <6% for batch-to-batch evaluation) and stability (only 7% decrease after five cycles). Subsequently, the TMMIPs were successfully applied for selective extraction of curcuminoids from complex natural product, Curcuma longa. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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