AI Article Synopsis

  • The ability to customize the size and shape of self-assembling materials is crucial for creating effective delivery systems for drugs and other substances.
  • The study shows that the structure of certain block copolymer-based nanoplatforms changes significantly based on the molecular weight of the copolymer and the method used for self-assembly.
  • Various techniques, such as nanoprecipitation and solvent-switching, allow for tailoring these materials into different forms—like core-shell nanoparticles or vesicular structures—depending on the conditions, offering a versatile approach to nanotechnology in cargo delivery.

Article Abstract

The ability to tune size and morphology of self-assemblies is particularly relevant in the development of delivery systems. By tailoring such structural parameters, one can provide larger cargo spaces or produce nanocarriers that can be loaded by hydrophilic and hydrophobic molecules starting ideally from the same polymer building unit. We herein demonstrate that the morphology of block copolymer-based pH-triggered nanoplatforms produced from poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline)-b-poly[2-(diisopropylamino)-ethyl methacrylate] (PMeOx-b-PDPA) is remarkably influenced by the overall molecular weight of the block copolymer, and by the selected method used to produce the self-assemblies. Polymeric vesicles were produced by nanoprecipitation using a block copolymer of relatively low molecular weight (M ∼ 10 kg.mol). Very exciting though, despite the high hydrophobic weight ratio (w > 0.70), this method conducted to the formation of core-shell nanoparticles when block copolymers of higher molecular weight were used, thus suggesting that the fast (few seconds) self-assembly procedure is controlled by kinetics rather than thermodynamics. We further demonstrated the formation of vesicular structures using longer chains via the solvent-switch approach when the "switching" to the bad solvent is performed in a time scale of a few hours (approximately 3 hs). We accordingly demonstrate that using fairly simple methods one can easily tailor the morphology of such block copolymer self-assemblies, thereby producing a variety of structurally different pH-triggered nanoplatforms via a kinetic or thermodynamically-controlled process. This is certainly attractive towards the development of nanotechnology-based cargo delivery systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2022.12.129DOI Listing

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