Polyaniline (PANI) and polyaramides deposited on the surfaces of glass slides and particulate silica were studied as adsorbents of nucleic acids and proteins by flow-through spectral correlation interferometry and solid-state extraction using spin-cartridges. Double stranded DNA from E. coli as well as pepsin, bovine serum albumin and lysozyme were the analytes studied in contact with the polymer nanolayers in phosphate buffer solution, pH 7.
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September 2016
The effect of chemical composition and morphology of the surface layers of new polyaramide-containing sorbents on the mechanism of selective sorption of nucleic acids and proteins was investigated as compared to the previously studied sorbents modified with fluoropolymers and polyaniline (high-throughput materials providing one-step isolation of DNA from biological mixtures). A series of silica-based sorbents modified with polyaramides having consistently varying structure and containing the set of "key" structural elements (aromatic units and nitrogen atoms in the backbone, fluorinated groups), and various donor and acceptor moieties was prepared. The chemical composition of the polymer coatings was evaluated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
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