Sophie Laroque, Katherine E S Locock, Sébastien Perrier
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Cationic Star Polymers Obtained by the Arm-First Approach─Influence of Arm Number and Positioning of Cationic Units on Antimicrobial Activity.
Recently, we published a study demonstrating the promising structure-activity relationship of 4-arm star polymers toward bacterial cells and biofilms. The aim of this study was to increase the number of arms to determine if this could further enhance activity via the arm-first approach, which enables access to star structures with a higher number of arms. A library of amphiphilic diblock and miktoarm star polymers was successfully synthesized, and their biological properties were assessed. The increased number of arms failed to increase activity for the diblock stars, possibly due to shielding of the cationic units located at the core from binding to the membrane, which was slightly improved for the miktoarm structures. However, the efficient synthesis of these structures shown herein could be used to synthesize star polymers with a higher cationic ratio or longer arms, thereby circumventing the limitation of reduced interaction of cationic units with the membrane.
期刊介绍:
Biomacromolecules is a leading forum for the dissemination of cutting-edge research at the interface of polymer science and biology. Submissions to Biomacromolecules should contain strong elements of innovation in terms of macromolecular design, synthesis and characterization, or in the application of polymer materials to biology and medicine.
Topics covered by Biomacromolecules include, but are not exclusively limited to: sustainable polymers, polymers based on natural and renewable resources, degradable polymers, polymer conjugates, polymeric drugs, polymers in biocatalysis, biomacromolecular assembly, biomimetic polymers, polymer-biomineral hybrids, biomimetic-polymer processing, polymer recycling, bioactive polymer surfaces, original polymer design for biomedical applications such as immunotherapy, drug delivery, gene delivery, antimicrobial applications, diagnostic imaging and biosensing, polymers in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, polymeric scaffolds and hydrogels for cell culture and delivery.