Recent advances in applications of fragment/dummy molecularly imprinted polymers

被引:9
|
作者
Wang Yixiao [1 ,2 ]
Li Jinhua [1 ,2 ]
Wang Liyan [1 ,2 ]
Qi Ji [1 ]
Chen Lingxin [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Key Lab Coastal Environm Proc & Ecol Remediat, Res Ctr Coastal Environm Engn & Technol, Yantai Inst Coastal Zone Res,Shandong Key Lab Coa, Yantai 264003, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Source & Environm, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China
关键词
molecularly imprinted polymers ( MIPs); fragment imprinting; dummy template imprinting; preparation; application; review; EXCELLENT RECOGNITION; EXTRACTION; TEMPLATE; ACID;
D O I
10.3724/SP.J.1123.2020.08008
中图分类号
O65 [分析化学];
学科分类号
070302 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Molecularly imprinted polymers ( MIPs) are designed to mimic the specific binding principle of enzymes to substrates or antigens to antibodies, while holding several advantages such as structure predictability, recognition specificity, easy preparation, low cost, high physical robustness, and thermal stability. Therefore, they have been widely applied in many fields including sample preparation ( pretreatment), sensing analysis ( chemo/biosensors), biomedicine, and environment/food analysis. To date, several strategies were developed for MIPs preparation, aiming to simplify the preparation process and/or improve the properties of the polymers, greatly broadening its usability. The exploration in various advanced imprinting strategies and their combinational use has become a research hotspot in MIPs preparation, among which the fragment imprinting strategy and the dummy template imprinting strategy are especially favored. Fragment imprinting, also called segment imprinting, uses a partial structure of the target molecule as a pseudo -template to prepare MIPs. This strategy is useful to target molecules that are not easy to obtain or that are too large to be used as templates, providing a feasible method for imprinting target analytes that are easy to inactivate or infect, as well as macromolecules that are difficult to imprint. In turn, dummy template imprinting uses molecules with structure, shape, and size similar to the target analytes as templates for imprinting. Because the target is not directly used as a template, this strategy can overcome problems of template leakage, as well as solve target molecule -related difficulties as they can be expensive, infectious, flammable, explosive, or chemically instable. This mini -review compiles information of several articles published in the last four years across ACS, Elsevier, RSC, and other databases, summarizing the most recent advances in the application of fragment/dummy template MIPs ( FMIPs/DMIPs). Herein, the biomedical application of FMIPs is mainly addressed as a strategy for the detection of proteins and microorganisms, and the application of FMIPs in the field of food analysis is also explored. In recent years, the imprinting of mammalian cells has made some progress in the application of FMIPs. Mammalian cells, especially cancer cells, overexpress some proteins and sugars, which are good fragment templates. Consequently, the fragment imprinting strategy is widely used in cancer cell imaging, localization, and treatment. Moreover, due to the complicated structure and easy inactivation of some proteins, their MIPs are often prepared by fragment imprinting ( also called epitope imprinting). As some microorganisms are infectious, imprinting microorganisms directly can pose a risk; therefore it is safer to also use the fragment imprinting strategy in such cases. The recent application of fragment imprinting strategy in other areas remains scarce. Nonetheless, three studies in the food analysis have explored this possibility. DMIPs are widely used in sample pretreatment and sensing analysis, and they are mainly used as SPE adsorbents for packed SPE, dispersive SPE addition, DMIPs are employed as molecularly imprinted membrane materials. As a result, by virtue of DMIPs, selective extraction and enrichment of target analytes from complicated samples can be achieved. MIP-based sensors can either recognize or transduce, meaning that they can specifically recognize and bind target analytes as well as generate output signals for detection. Because of the high selectivity of MIPs, the use of a dummy template imprinting strategy solves the problem of template leakage in the process of recognition and adsorption, further improving the detection accuracy and sensitivity of the sensor. These features expand the application range of MIP-based sensors. This review briefly overviews the construction and application of chemiluminescence and fluorescence sensors based on DMIPs. Lastly, the advantages and disadvantages, differences, and relationships among the two strategies are summarized. Despite of their potential, four main challenges still remain as major setbacks for the application of FMIPs and DMIPs: ( i) the difficulty to select or prepare appropriate fragment templates and dummy templates; ( ii) how to ensure that there is almost no difference in the recognition adsorption selectivity between the fragment/dummy template and the original template, so as to ensure optimal recognition specificity; () the use of, environment-friendly reagents to reduce pollution during FMIPs/DMIPs preparation and use to conform with green chemistry requirements; ( iv) how to strengthen the industrial and commercial applications of FMIPs and DMIPs. Therefore, significant efforts should be made to develop new imprinting strategies and techniques, as well as to adopt combinational imprinting approaches for FMIPs/DMIPs preparation to expedite the sustainable development and efficient application of FMIPs and DMIPs.
引用
收藏
页码:134 / 141
页数:8
相关论文
共 23 条
  • [1] Dummy molecularly imprinted polymers based on a green synthesis strategy for magnetic solid-phase extraction of acrylamide in food samples
    Bagheri, Ahmad Reza
    Arabi, Maryam
    Ghaedi, Mehrorang
    Ostovan, Abbas
    Wang, Xiaoyan
    Li, Jinhua
    Chen, Lingxin
    [J]. TALANTA, 2019, 195 : 390 - 400
  • [2] Dummy template surface molecularly imprinted polymers based on silica gel for removing imidacloprid and acetamiprid in tea polyphenols
    Chen, Jingyu
    Huang, Xin
    Wang, Li
    Ma, Chaoyang
    Wu, Shijia
    Wang, Hongxin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SEPARATION SCIENCE, 2020, 43 (12) : 2467 - 2476
  • [3] Sensing HIV Protease and Its Inhibitor Using "Helical Epitope"-Imprinted Polymers
    Chou, Chien-Yu
    Lin, Chung-Yin
    Wu, Cheng-Hsin
    Tai, Dar-Fu
    [J]. SENSORS, 2020, 20 (12) : 1 - 10
  • [4] Rapid detection of aflatoxin B1 by dummy template molecularly imprinted polymer capped CdTe quantum dots
    Guo, Pengqi
    Yang, Wu
    Hu, Hao
    Wang, Yitao
    Li, Peng
    [J]. ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2019, 411 (12) : 2607 - 2617
  • [5] Epitope imprinting of iron binding protein of Neisseria meningitidis bacteria through multiple monomers imprinting approach
    Gupta, Neha
    Singh, Roop Shikha
    Shah, Kavita
    Prasad, Rajniti
    Singh, Meenakshi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION, 2018, 31 (07)
  • [6] Using-polymerization synthesis of boronate-affinity hollow stannic oxide based fragment template molecularly imprinted polymers for the selective recognition of polyphenols
    Hou, Xingyu
    Guo, Bailin
    Tong, Yukui
    Tian, Miaomiao
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A, 2020, 1612
  • [7] A microtitre chemiluminescence sensor for detection of pyrethroids based on dual-dummy-template molecularly imprinted polymer and computational simulation
    Huang, Jing Jie
    Liu, Jing
    Liu, Ju Xiang
    Wang, Jian Ping
    [J]. LUMINESCENCE, 2020, 35 (01) : 120 - 128
  • [8] Epitope imprinting of Mycobacterium leprae bacteria via molecularly imprinted nanoparticles using multiple monomers approach
    Kushwaha, Archana
    Srivastava, Juhi
    Singh, Ambareesh Kumar
    Anand, Richa
    Raghuwanshi, Richa
    Rai, Tulika
    Singh, Meenakshi
    [J]. BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS, 2019, 145
  • [9] Determination of sulfonamides in meat with dummy-template molecularly imprinted polymer-based chemiluminescence sensor
    Li, Zhao Bin
    Liu, Jing
    Liu, Ju Xiang
    Wang, Zhan Hui
    Wang, Jian Ping
    [J]. ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2019, 411 (14) : 3179 - 3189
  • [10] Preparation of Sialic Acid-Imprinted Fluorescent Conjugated Nanoparticles and Their Application for Targeted Cancer Cell Imaging
    Liu, Ronghua
    Cui, Qianling
    Wang, Chun
    Wang, Xiaoyu
    Yang, Yu
    Li, Lidong
    [J]. ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2017, 9 (03) : 3006 - 3015