Enzyme assays are important for studying enzymemediated biochemical reactions and for clinical diagnosis and drug development. The technique of an immobilized enzyme microreactor (IMER) integrated with capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been frequently utilized in online enzyme assays. However, the traditional approaches for IMER-CE enzyme analysis have some defects such as low loading capacity and poor stability. Herein, metal−organic frameworks (MOFs), which have enormous potential in the fields of enzyme immobilization and capillary electrochromatographic (CEC) separation, were first explored as novel support materials with good enzyme immobilization performance and stationary phases with excellent separation abilities to construct an integrated MOFs-IMER-CEC microanalysis system for a high-efficiency online enzyme assay. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was immobilized on a densely packed UiO-66-NH 2 nanocrystal coating on a capillary inner surface with abundant intercrystalline mesoporosity and was employed as a highly effective and robust IMER for CEC-integrated online enzyme analysis. The excellent separation performance of the UiO-66-NH 2 -modified capillary was verified by high-efficiency separation of three types of neutral, acidic, and basic compounds. The Michaelis−Menten constant and enzyme inhibition kinetics of UiO-66-NH 2 −IMER were systematically assessed, exhibiting distinct advantages such as remarkably increased enzyme loadability, superior affinity for substrates, and greatly improved stability and repeatability compared to CE-integrated IMERs prepared by the traditional covalent bonding method. Furthermore, the developed method was successfully utilized for detecting organophosphorus pesticides in leguminous vegetable samples, demonstrating its strong practicality. The study not only proposed a novel support material and construction strategy for a highperformance microchannel-based IMER but also can be widely used in bioanalysis and biosensing research.
A large number of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have exhibited increasingly wide utilization in the field of chromatographic separation owing to their intrinsic fascinating properties. However, the previous studies on supported MOF coating-based chromatographic separation focused only on the synthesis and chromatographic performance of a certain kind of supported MOF coatings as stationary phases using the multiple-step, complicated, and time-consuming modification methods, which severely impeded the widespread application of MOFs in separation science. Herein, a high-efficiency and versatile methodology toward diverse supported MOF coating-based stationary phases to achieve high-efficiency chromatographic separation was first reported based on the immobilized cysteine (Cys)-triggered in situ growth (ICISG) strategy. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, four types of MOF crystals consisting of different ligands and metal ions (Zn2+, Cu2+, Fe3+, and Zr4+) were conveniently and firmly grown on a Cys-modified capillary using the ICISG strategy and employed as the functional stationary phase for electrochromatographic separation. A broad variety of neutral, acidic, and basic compounds were all separated in a highly efficient manner on the developed four MOF-coated columns. The maximum theoretical plate number for Cys-MIL-100(Fe)@capillary was close to 1.0 × 105 plates/m, and the intraday, interday, and column-to-column repeatabilities of retention times for the four MOF-modified columns were all less than 5.25%. More interestingly, the diversified separation performance of the developed MOF-coated columns indicated that the preparation strategy and the skeletal structure of the MOF coating-based stationary phases have a significant influence on the electrochromatographic separation performance and column capacity. Benefiting from the strong universality and high applicability of the developed ICISG strategy, the present study provides an effective route to facilitate the design and fabrication of novel functional MOF-based chromatographic stationary phases.
Metal−organic frameworks (MOFs) have been widely applied in a variety of fields. However, most of the developed MOFs are micrometer scale in crystal size and contain only micropores, which will limit the mass transport and diffusion of various analytes into their internal interaction sites, severely restricting the potential of MOFs in separation science. Herein, nanoscale hierarchically porous MOFs (NHP-MOFs) were first explored as a novel MOF-based stationary phase with excellent mass transfer performance and abundant accessible interaction sites for high-performance chromatographic separation. As a proofof-concept demonstration, the nanoscale hierarchically micro-and mesoporous UiO-66 (NHP-UiO-66) was firmly immobilized on the capillary inner surface and utilized as the porous stationary phase for high-resolution and high-efficiency electrochromatographic separation. A wide range of low-, medium-, and highmolecular-weight analytes, including substituted benzenes, chlorobenzenes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, nucleosides, polypeptides, and proteins were all separated well on a NHP-UiO-66-coated column with excellent resolution and repeatability, exhibiting significantly improved column efficiency and separation ability compared to those of a microporous UiO-66-modified column. The maximum column efficiencies for all the six kinds of analytes reached up to 1.2 × 10 5 plates/m, and the relative standard deviations of the migration times of substituted benzenes for intraday, interday, and column-to-column were all lower than 5.8%. These results reveal that NHP-MOFs can effectively combine the advantages of the high specific surface area of microporous MOFs and the excellent mass transfer performance and abundant accessible interaction sites of NHP materials, possessing great prospect for high-performance chromatographic separation.
Herein, a novel L-arginine (L-Arg)-modified polydopamine (PDA)-coated capillary (PDA/L-Arg@capillary) was firstly fabricated via the basic amino-acid-induced PDA co-deposition strategy and employed to constitute a new chiral ligand exchange capillary electrochromatography (CLE-CEC) method for the high-performance enantioseparation of D,L-amino acids (D,L-AAs) with L-Arg as the immobilized chiral ligand coordinating with the central metal ion Zn(II) as running buffer. Assisted by hydrothermal treatment, the robust immobilization of L-Arg on the capillary inner wall could be facilely achieved within 1 h, prominently improving the synthesis efficiency and simplifying the preparation procedure. The successful preparation of PDA/L-Arg coatings in the capillary was systematically characterized and confirmed using several methods. In comparison with bare and PDA-functionalized capillaries, the enantioseparation capability of the presented CLE-CEC system was significantly enhanced. Eight D,L-AAs were completely separated and three pairs were partially separated under the optimal conditions. The prepared PDA/L-Arg@capillary showed good repeatability and stability. The potential mechanism of the greatly enhanced enantioseparation performance obtained by PDA/L-Arg@capillary was also explored. Moreover, the proposed method was further utilized for studying the enzyme kinetics of L-glutamic dehydrogenase, exhibiting its promising prospects in enzyme assays and other related applications.
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have exhibited tremendous potential in the area of separation science. However, most of the developed MOF-based stationary phases contained only microporous structures and suffer from limited separation performance. Herein, homomesoporous MOFs with excellent mass transfer capability and strong thermodynamic interactions are first explored as the novel stationary phase for high-performance capillary electrochromatographic separations. As a proof of concept, noninterpenetrated mesoMOF-1 with uniform mesopore sizes (22.5 × 26.1 Å) and good stability was facilely grown on the inner surface of capillaries and applied as a homomesoporous MOF coating-based stationary phase for high-efficiency electrochromatographic separation. Seven types of analytes with different molecular dimensions were all baseline separated on a mesoMOF-1 coated column with high theoretical plate numbers and excellent repeatability, exhibiting significantly improved separation selectivity and column efficiency in comparison to a microporous HKUST-1 coated column. The maximum column efficiencies of the mesoMOF-1 coated column for substituted benzenes and halobenzenes reached up to 1.4 × 105 plates/m, and its mass loadability was also much higher than that of the HKUST-1 coated column. In addition, based on the analysis of adsorption kinetics and chromatographic retention behaviors, the interaction and retention mechanisms of different molecular-weight analytes on mesoMOF-1 coated stationary phases were systematically explored and disclosed in detail. These results indicate that the homomesoporous MOF-based stationary phase can effectively balance the kinetic diffusion (mass transfer capability) and thermodynamic interactions (the strength of adsorption interaction), having great potential for high-performance chromatographic separation.
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