| Literature DB >> 28537595 |
Jia Niu1,2, David J Lunn2,3, Anusha Pusuluri4, Justin I Yoo4, Michelle A O'Malley4, Samir Mitragotri4,5, H Tom Soh6,7, Craig J Hawker1,2,5,8.
Abstract
The capability to graft synthetic polymers onto the surfaces of live cells offers the potential to manipulate and control their phenotype and underlying cellular processes. Conventional grafting-to strategies for conjugating preformed polymers to cell surfaces are limited by low polymer grafting efficiency. Here we report an alternative grafting-from strategy for directly engineering the surfaces of live yeast and mammalian cells through cell surface-initiated controlled radical polymerization. By developing cytocompatible PET-RAFT (photoinduced electron transfer-reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization), synthetic polymers with narrow polydispersity (Mw/Mn < 1.3) could be obtained at room temperature in 5 minutes. This polymerization strategy enables chain growth to be initiated directly from chain-transfer agents anchored on the surface of live cells using either covalent attachment or non-covalent insertion, while maintaining high cell viability. Compared with conventional grafting-to approaches, these methods significantly improve the efficiency of grafting polymer chains and enable the active manipulation of cellular phenotypes.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28537595 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427