Confined Microenvironments from Thermoresponsive Dendronized Polymers
- PMID: 32639094
- DOI: 10.1002/marc.202000325
Confined Microenvironments from Thermoresponsive Dendronized Polymers
Abstract
Confined microenvironments in biomacromolecules arising from molecular crowding account for their well-defined biofunctions and bioactivities. To mimick this, synthetic polymers to form confined structures or microenvironments are of key scientific value, which have received significant attention recently. To create synthetic confined microenvironments, molecular crowding effects and topological cooperative effects have been applied successfully, and the key is balance between self-association of structural units and self-repulsion from crowding-induced steric hindrance. In this article, formation of confined microenvironments from stimuli-responsive dendronized polymers carrying densely dendritic oligoethylene glycols (OEGs) moieties in their pendants is presented. These wormlike thick macromolecules exhibit characteristic thermoresponsive properties, which can provide constrained microenvironments to encapsulate effectively guest molecules including dyes, proteins, or nucleic acids to prevent their protonation or biodegradation. This efficient shielding effect can also mediate chemical reactions in aqueous phase, and even enhance chirality transferring efficiency. All of these can be switched off simply through the thermally-induced dehydration and collapse of OEG dendrons due to the amphiphilicity of OEG chains. Furthermore, the switchable encapsulation and release of guests can be greatly enhanced when these dendronized polymers are used as major constituents for fabricating bulk hydrogels or nanogels, which provide a higher-level confinement.
Keywords: dendronized polymers; macromolecular crowding; micro-confinements; thermoresponsive polymers; topological polymers.
© 2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
References
-
- a) A. P. Minton, Mol. Cell. Biochem. 1983, 55, 119;
-
- b) R. J. Ellis, Trends Biochem. Sci. 2001, 26, 597;
-
- c) R. J. Ellis, A. P. Minton, Nature 2003, 425, 27;
-
- d) G. Rivas, F. Ferrone, J. Herzfeld, EMBO Rep. 2004, 5, 23;
-
- e) H.-X. Zhou, G. Rivas, A. P. Minton, Annu. Rev. Biophys. 2008, 37, 375;
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
- 21971161/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21971160/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21034004/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21104043/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21204047/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21304056/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21374058/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21474060/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 21574078/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 201131081200177/Programs Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China
- 201331081100166/Programs Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China
- 10520500300/Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai
- 11PJ1404100/Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai
- 16QA1401800/Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai
- 19PJ1403700/Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai
- 19ZR1418000/Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai
- ETH-1608-1/ETH Zurich
- 200021-113690/SNSF_/Swiss National Science Foundation/Switzerland
- 200020-121817/SNSF_/Swiss National Science Foundation/Switzerland
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources