6 research outputs found
Development of a Screening Method for Fluoroquinolones in Meat Samples Using Molecularly Imprinted Carbon Dots
An accurate and simple screening method has been developed for the determination of fluoroquinolone antibiotics. Carbon dots were synthesized by simple hydrothermal treatment as highly fluorescent nano-sensors. They were subsequently used in the synthesis of organic-based molecularly imprinted polymers to develop fluorescence-based polymeric composites using enoxacin as a representative dummy template molecule of fluoroquinolones. The method was optimized concerning the pH of the medium and composite concentration. The normalized fluorescence intensity showed efficient quenching under optimized conditions upon successive addition of the template, with an excellent correlation coefficient. The proposed method was applied to eight other fluoroquinolones, exhibiting, in all cases, good correlation coefficients (0.65â0.992) within the same linearity range (0.03â2.60 mg mLâ1). Excellent detection and quantification limits were been obtained for the target analytes down to 0.062 and 0.186 mg Lâ1, respectively. All studied analytes showed no interference with enrofloxacin, the most commonly used veterinary fluoroquinolone, with a percentage of cross-reactivity varying from 89.00 to 540.00%. This method was applied successfully for the determination of enrofloxacin in three different types of meat samples: beef, pork, and chicken, with good recoveries varying from 70 to 100% at three levels. This new procedure is an easy analytical method that can be useful as a screening method for monitoring the environmental hazard of fluoroquinolones in quality control laboratories
The Ultratrace Determination of Fluoroquinolones in River Water Samples by an Online Solid-Phase Extraction Method Using a Molecularly Imprinted Polymer as a Selective Sorbent
Fluoroquinolones (FQs) are broad-spectrum antibiotics widely used to treat animal and human infections. The use of FQs in these activities has increased the presence of antibiotics in wastewater and food, triggering antimicrobial resistance, which has severe consequences for human health. The detection of antibiotics residues in water and food samples has attracted much attention. Herein, we report the development of a highly sensitive online solid-phase extraction methodology based on a selective molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) and fluorescent detection (HPLC-FLD) for the determination of FQs in water at low ng L−1 level concentration. Under the optimal conditions, good linearity was obtained ranging from 0.7 to 666 ng L−1 for 7 FQs, achieving limits of detection (LOD) in the low ng L−1 level and excellent precision. Recoveries ranged between 54 and 118% (RSD < 17%) for all the FQs tested. The method was applied to determining FQs in river water. These results demonstrated that the developed method is highly sensitive and selective
Magnetic Field-Induced Polymerization of Molecularly Imprinted Polymers
In
this work, we developed a novel approach for the preparation
of molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) coatings directly onto magnetic
multicore nanoparticles (MMCs) using alternating magnetic fields to
trigger the polymerization reaction. MIPs were synthesized with rhodamine
123 (R123) as model template molecule, methacrylic acid as functional
monomer, and trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate as cross-linker. The
amount of iron oxide nanoparticles and the composition of the polymerization
mixture were optimized to enable the thermal polymerization of a thin
MIP shell on each MMC using electromagnetic heating without altering
the properties of the recognition layer. The thickness of the polymerized
MIP layer grafted onto the MMCs was fine-tuned by adjusting the dose
of electromagnetic field (101.4 kHz, total power dissipation = 105
W). The resulting magnetic multicore MIP nanoparticles (MMC-MIPs)
were characterized by Fourier transform infrared and X-ray diffraction
spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and dynamic light
scattering