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      Speciation of inorganic arsenic in environmental waters using magnetic solid phase extraction and preconcentration followed by ICP-MS

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      Microchimica Acta
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Arsenic — a Review. Part I: Occurrence, Toxicity, Speciation, Mobility

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            A novel strategy for encapsulation and release of proteins: hydrogels and microgels with acid-labile acetal cross-linkers.

            A new acid-labile acetal cross-linker was synthesized and used to prepare protein-loaded hydrogels and microgels. This cross-linker undergoes an acid-catalyzed degradation with a half-life of 5.5 min at pH 5.0 and 24 h at pH 7.4. Protein-loaded hydrogels were synthesized with this cross-linker, and their release profiles were measured as a function of pH. Hydrogels made with the acetal cross-linker release their contents in a pH-dependent manner. The acetal cross-linker was also used to synthesize microgels with sizes between 1 and 10 mum, a range suitable for phagocytosis. The unique acid sensitivity of the acetal cross-linker should make it a useful synthetic intermediate in the design of acid-sensitive drug or gene delivery systems.
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              Magnetite-containing spherical silica nanoparticles for biocatalysis and bioseparations.

              The simultaneous entrapment of biological macromolecules and nanostructured silica-coated magnetite in sol-gel materials using a reverse-micelle technique leads to a bioactive, mechanically stable, nanometer-sized, and magnetically separable particles. These spherical particles have a typical diameter of 53 +/- 4 nm, a large surface area of 330 m(2)/g, an average pore diameter of 1.5 nm, a total pore volume of 1.427 cm(3)/g and a saturated magnetization (M(S)) of 3.2 emu/g. Peroxidase entrapped in these particles shows Michaelis-Mentan kinetics and high activity. The catalytic reaction will take place immediately after adding these particles to the reaction solution. These enzyme entrapping particles catalysts can be easily separated from the reaction mixture by simply using an external magnetic field. Experiments have proved that these catalysts have a long-term stability toward temperature and pH change, as compared to free enzyme molecules. To further prove the application of this novel magnetic biomaterial in analytical chemistry, a magnetic-separation immunoassay system was also developed for the quantitative determination of gentamicin. The calibration for gentamicin has a working range of 200-4000 ng/mL, with a detection limit of 160 ng/mL, which is close to that of the fluorescent polarization immunoassay (FPIA) using the same reactants.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Microchimica Acta
                Microchim Acta
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0026-3672
                1436-5073
                April 2011
                January 13 2011
                April 2011
                : 173
                : 1-2
                : 165-172
                Article
                10.1007/s00604-010-0532-9
                0235699a-8dae-4558-abbe-75cc9bbe593a
                © 2011

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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