Publication | Closed Access
Carbonaceous Materials Passivation on Amine Functionalized Magnetic Nanoparticles and Its Application for Metal Affinity Isolation of Recombinant Protein
13
Citations
40
References
2011
Year
NanoparticlesEngineeringPolymer-based MagnetCarbonaceous Materials PassivationBio-based NanomaterialsChemistryEnzyme ImmobilizationProtein NanoparticlesMagnetismChemical EngineeringAcrylic AcidMetal Affinity IsolationCarbonaceous ShellNanoparticle CharacterizationBiochemistryNanotechnologyNanobiotechnologyRecombinant ProteinBiopolymersBiomolecular EngineeringBiomanufacturingMagnetic NanoparticlesMolecule-based MagnetNanomaterialsNatural SciencesBiotechnologyNanomagnetism
Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) with an amine functionalized surface (MH) were passivated with carbonaceous materials (MH@C) by carbonization of glucose under hydrothermal reaction conditions. The carboxylate groups in carbonaceous shell could be enriched to 0.285 mmol/g when acrylic acid was added as a functional monomer in the carbonization reaction (MH@C-Ac). The carbonaceous shell not only protected the magnetic core from acidic erosion but also showed a high adsorption capacity toward Ni(2+) ion. The Ni(2+) ion complexed on MH@C and MH@C-Ac could specifically isolate 6×His tagged recombinant proteins from crude bacterial extracts via metal affinity interaction. The superparamagnetic property facilitates the easy retrieval of the carbonaceous material passivated MNPs from the viscous proteins solutions. Recombinant green fluorescence protein (GFP) and hyaluronic acid (HA) lyase of 9.4 mg and 2.3 mg could be isolated by 1 g of MH@C-Ac-Ni, respectively.
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