| Literature DB >> 30354069 |
Irene Buzzacchera1,2,3, Qi Xiao1,4, Hong Han1, Khosrow Rahimi2,5, Shangda Li1, Nina Yu Kostina2,5, B Jelle Toebes6, Samantha E Wilner1, Martin Möller2,5, Cesar Rodriguez-Emmenegger2,5, Tobias Baumgart1, Daniela A Wilson6, Christopher J Wilson3, Michael L Klein4, Virgil Percec1.
Abstract
Natural, including plant, and synthetic phenolic acids are employed as building blocks for the synthesis of constitutional isomeric libraries of self-assembling dendrons and dendrimers that are the simplest examples of programmed synthetic macromolecules. Amphiphilic Janus dendrimers are synthesized from a diversity of building blocks including natural phenolic acids. They self-assemble in water or buffer into vesicular dendrimersomes employed as biological membrane mimics, hybrid and synthetic cells. These dendrimersomes are predominantly uni- or multilamellar vesicles with size and polydispersity that is predicted by their primary structure. However, in numerous cases, unilamellar dendrimersomes completely free of multilamellar assemblies are desirable. Here, we report the synthesis and structural analysis of a library containing 13 amphiphilic Janus dendrimers containing linear and branched alkyl chains on their hydrophobic part. They were prepared by an optimized iterative modular synthesis starting from natural phenolic acids. Monodisperse dendrimersomes were prepared by injection and giant polydisperse by hydration. Both were structurally characterized to select the molecular design principles that provide unilamellar dendrimersomes in higher yields and shorter reaction times than under previously used reaction conditions. These dendrimersomes are expected to provide important tools for synthetic cell biology, encapsulation, and delivery.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30354069 PMCID: PMC6571140 DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.8b01405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomacromolecules ISSN: 1525-7797 Impact factor: 6.988