Polymersomes are multicompartmental
vesicular nano-objects obtained
by self-assembly of amphiphilic copolymers. When prepared in the aqueous
phase, they are composed of a hydrophobic bilayer enclosing water.
Although such fascinating polymeric nano-objects have been widely
reported with synthetic block copolymers, their formation from polysaccharide-based
copolymers remains a significant challenge. In the present study,
the powerful platform technology known as polymerization-induced self-assembly
was used to prepare in situ pure vesicles from a polysaccharide-grafted
copolymer: dextran-g-poly(2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate)
(Dex-g-PHPMA). The growth of the PHPMA grafts was
performed with a dextran-based macromolecular chain transfer agent
in water at 20 °C using photomediated reversible addition fragmentation
chain transfer polymerization at 405 nm. Transmission electron microscopy,
cryogenic electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, atomic
force microscopy, and dynamic light scattering revealed that amphiphilic
Dex-g-PHPMA
X = 100–300 (X is the targeted average degree of polymerization, Xn
̅, of each graft at full conversion) exhibit
remarkable self-assembly behavior. On the one hand, vesicles were
obtained over a wide range of solid concentrations (from 2.5% to 13.5%
w/w), which can facilitate posterior targeting of such rare morphology.
On the other hand, the extension of Xn
̅ induces an increase in the vesicle membrane thickness, rather
than a morphological evolution (spherical micelles to cylinders to
vesicles).
The self-assembly methods and the temperature have a considerable impact on the morphology of the resulting nanoobjects in the case of amphiphilic glycopolymers.
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