4.8 Article

Multicompartment Polymer Nanostructures with Ratiometric Dual-Emission pH-Sensitivity

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 133, Issue 22, Pages 8534-8543

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja200182t

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health [HL080729, HHSN268201000046C]
  2. Covidien
  3. GlaxoSmithKline
  4. NIH [P30 DC004665]
  5. Northwestern University
  6. Argonne National Laboratories

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Pyrazine-labeled multicompartment nanostructures are shown to exhibit enhanced pH-responsive blue-shifted fluorescence emission intensities compared to their simpler core shell spherical analogs. An amphiphilic linear triblock terpolymer of ethylene oxide, N-acryloxysuccinimide, and styrene, PEO45-b-PNAS(105)-b-PS45, which lacks significant incompatibility for the hydrophobic block segments and undergoes gradual hydrolysis of the NAS units, underwent supramolecular assembly in mixtures of organic solvent and water to afford multicompartment micelles (MCMs) with a narrow size distribution. The assembly process was followed over time and found to evolve from individual polymer nanodroplets containing internally phase segregated domains, of increasing definition, and ultimately to dissociate into discrete micelles. Upon covalent cross-linking of the MCMs with pH-insensitive pyrazine-based diamino cross-linkers, pH-responsive, photonic multicompartment nanostructures (MCNs) were produced. These MCNs exhibited significant enhancement of overall structural stability, in comparison with the MCMs, and internal structural tunability through the cross-linking chemistry. Meanwhile, the complex compartmentalized morphology exerted unique pH-responsive fluorescence dual-emission properties, indicating promise in ratiometric pH-sensing applications.

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