Adsorption and Recovery of Polyphenolic Flavonoids Using TiO2-Functionalized Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles
2017
Khan, M Arif | Wallace, Wm. T. (William T.) | Islam, Syed Z. | Nagpure, Suraj | Strzalka, Joseph | Littleton, John M. | Rankin, Stephen E. | Knutson, Barbara L.
Exploiting specific interactions with titania (TiO₂) has been proposed for the separation and recovery of a broad range of biomolecules and natural products, including therapeutic polyphenolic flavonoids which are susceptible to degradation, such as quercetin. Functionalizing mesoporous silica with TiO₂ has many potential advantages over bulk and mesoporous TiO₂ as an adsorbent for natural products, including robust synthetic approaches leading to high surface area, and stable separation platforms. Here, TiO₂-surface-functionalized mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNPs) are synthesized and characterized as a function of TiO₂ content (up to 636 mg TiO₂/g). The adsorption isotherms of two polyphenolic flavonoids, quercetin and rutin, were determined (0.05–10 mg/mL in ethanol), and a 100-fold increase in the adsorption capacity was observed relative to functionalized nonporous particles with similar TiO₂ surface coverage. An optimum extent of functionalization (approximately 440 mg TiO₂/g particles) is interpreted from characterization techniques including grazing incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), and nitrogen adsorption, which examined the interplay between the extent of TiO₂ functionalization and the accessibility of the porous structures. The recovery of flavonoids is demonstrated using ligand displacement in ethanolic citric acid solution (20% w/v), in which greater than 90% recovery can be achieved in a multistep extraction process. The radical scavenging activity (RSA) of the recovered and particle-bound quercetin as measured by a 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical scavenging assay demonstrates greater than 80% retention of antioxidant activity by both particle-bound and recovered quercetin. These mesoporous titanosilicate materials can serve as a synthetic platform to isolate, recover, and potentially deliver degradation-sensitive natural products to biological systems.
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