Removal of iron by chelation with molecularly imprinted supermacroporous cryogel

Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology
Duygu ÇimenFatma Yılmaz

Abstract

Iron chelation therapy can be used for the selective removal of Fe(3+) ions from spiked human plasma by ion imprinting. N-Methacryloyl-(L)-glutamic acid (MAGA) was chosen as the chelating monomer. In the first step, MAGA was complexed with the Fe(3+) ions to prepare the precomplex, and then the ion-imprinted poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate-N-methacryloyl-(L)-glutamic acid) [PHEMAGA-Fe(3+)] cryogel column was prepared by cryo-polymerization under a semi-frozen temperature of - 12°C for 24 h. Subsequently, the template, of Fe(3+) ions was removed from the matrix by using 0.1 M EDTA solution. The values for the specific surface area of the imprinted PHEMAGA-Fe(3+) and non-imprinted PHEMAGA cryogel were 45.74 and 7.52 m(2)/g respectively, with a pore size in the range of 50-200 μm in diameter. The maximum Fe(3+) adsorption capacity was 19.8 μmol Fe(3+)/g cryogel from aqueous solutions and 12.28 μmol Fe(3+)/g cryogel from spiked human plasma. The relative selectivity coefficients of ion-imprinted cryogel for Fe(3+)/Ni(2+) and Fe(3+)/Cd(2+) were 1.6 and 4.2-fold greater than the non-imprinted matrix, respectively. It means that the PHEMAGA-Fe(3+) cryogel possesses high selectivity to Fe(3+) ions, and could be used many times without s...Continue Reading

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