Abstract

Molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP)-based optosensing materials capable of direct, reliable, and highly selective detection of small organic analytes in complex aqueous samples hold great promise in many bioanalytical applications, but their development remains a challenging task. Addressing this issue, well-defined hydrophilic “turn-on”-type ratiometric fluorescent MIP microspheres are developed via a versatile and modular strategy based on the controlled/“living” radical polymerization method. Its general principle was demonstrated by the synthesis of red CdTe quantum dot (QD)-labeled silica particles with surface-bound atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP)-initiating groups via the one-pot sol-gel reaction and their successive grafting of a thin fluorescent 2,4-D (an organic herbicide)-MIP layer (labeled with green organic fluorophores bearing both nitrobenzoxadiazole (NBD) and urea interacting groups) and hydrophilic poly(glyceryl monomethacrylate) (PGMMA) brushes via surface-initiated ATRP. The introduction of PGMMA brushes and rationally selected dual fluorescence labeling (i.e., red CdTe QDs being inert to 2,4-D and green NBD showing fluorescence “light-up” upon binding 2,4-D) onto MIP particles afforded them excellent complex aqueous sample-compatibility (due to their largely enhanced hydrophilicity) and analyte binding-induced “turn-on”-type ratiometric fluorescence changes, respectively. Such advanced MIP particles proved to be promising optosensing materials, which had a detection limit of 0.13 μM and showed obvious fluorescent color change upon binding different concentrations of 2,4-D in the undiluted pure milk. Moreover, they were successfully applied for direct and highly selective quantification of 2,4-D in the undiluted pure goat and bovine milks with good recoveries (97.9%–104.5%), even in the presence of several analogues of 2,4-D.

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