| Literature DB >> 32358489 |
Parambath Anilkumar1,2, Taylor B Lawson3,4, Srinivas Abbina1,2, Janne T A Mäkelä4,5,6, Robert C Sabatelle6, Lily E Takeuchi1,2, Brian D Snyder4,6, Mark W Grinstaff7,8,9,10, Jayachandran N Kizhakkedathu11,12,13,14.
Abstract
A longstanding goal in science and engineering is to mimic the size, structure, and functionality present in biology with synthetic analogs. Today, synthetic globular polymers of several million molecular weight are unknown, and, yet, these structures are expected to exhibit unanticipated properties due to their size, compactness, and low inter-chain interactions. Here we report the gram-scale synthesis of dendritic polymers, mega hyperbranched polyglycerols (mega HPGs), in million daltons. The mega HPGs are highly water soluble, soft, nanometer-scale single polymer particles that exhibit low intrinsic viscosities. Further, the mega HPGs are lubricants acting as interposed single molecule ball bearings to reduce the coefficient of friction between both hard and soft natural surfaces in a size dependent manner. We attribute this result to their globular and single particle nature together with its exceptional hydration. Collectively, these results set the stage for new opportunities in the design, synthesis, and evaluation of mega polymers.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32358489 PMCID: PMC7195476 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15975-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Synthesis and characterization of mega HPGs.
a Schematic representation of synthesis of mega HPGs (Mw: 1.3–9.3 MDa) by a macroinitiator approach in combination with solvent-based ring-opening multibranching polymerization. b 1H NMR and c 13C IG NMR characterization confirmed the structural features of the mega HPG-3. d Gel permeation chromatography analysis shows the monomodal distribution of mega HPG-3. e Formation of single particles and globular shape of mega HPG-3 was confirmed by cryo-SEM.
Physical characteristics of mega HPGs.
| Entry | Polymer | Đ | DOB | Size (nm) | [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mega HPG-1 | 1.3 × 106 | 1.2 | 0.57 | 21.2 ± 0.4 | 4.67 |
| 2 | Mega HPG-2 | 2.9 × 106 | 1.2 | 0.54 | 30.6 ± 0.6 | 5.26 |
| 3 | Mega HPG-3 | 9.3 × 106 | 1.4 | 0.53 | 43.0 ± 0.4 | 6.15 |
Absolute molecular weight (Mw) and distribution (Đ) of mega HPGs was confirmed by size-exclusion chromatography coupled with light scattering detector (MALS). Degree of branching (DOB—53-57%) supports the semidendritic nature of the polymers and it was determined by 13C IG NMR spectroscopy. Mega HPGs are compact in size and have low intrinsic viscosity [ƞ], determined by quasielastic light scattering (QELS) detector and viscometer-II detector, respectively, which are coupled to a gel permeation chromatography system.
Fig. 2Comparison of solution properties of mega HPGs with PEG and PAMAM dendrimers.
a Variation of hydrodynamic size of the polymer with molecular weight. Mega HPGs and their low molecular weight counterparts (first four data points), and PAMAM dendrimers are compact in size compared to PEG polymers. The values for high molecular weight HPGs (76.5, 307, and 771 kDa) are obtained from literature[64]. For PEGs, the size of PEG-4 (11 MDa) was derived from Rg and simulation studies[63]. b Dependence of intrinsic viscosity of the polymers with molecular weight (arrow shows the representative y-axis). Mega HPGs showed similar intrinsic viscosity behavior as that of PAMAM dendrimers; however, slight increment with molecular weight might was observed. The PEG systems showed liner dependency with molecular weight.
Fig. 3Lubrication characteristics of mega HPGs.
a Graph of the Hersey number at which each group transitions from boundary mode to mixed mode lubrication (left y-axis and green bars). The COF at the time each lubricant transitions from boundary to mixed mode lubrication (right y-axis, black symbols). Error bars represent standard deviation, N = 3 replicates; one-way ANOVA used to compare groups, statistical differences indicated by asterisk, where *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ****p < 0.0001. For full list of statistical results see Supplementary Information. b. Stribeck curves for best preforming mega HPG (mega HPG-3) at both 7 and 23 w/v%, as well as two controls, BSF and Synvisc One. Error bars represent standard deviation, N = 3 replicates.
Fig. 4Determination of COF of mega HPGs.
COF values for cartilage on cartilage with each lubricant after equilibrating in creep, as shown with box-and-whiskers plot. Whiskers represent (min to max), bounds of box represent lower (25th percentile) and upper quartile (75th percentile), and center line represents median. Error bars represent standard deviation, N = 3 or greater replicates; one-way ANOVA used to compare groups, statistical differences indicated by asterisk, where *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ****p < 0.0001. For full list of statistical results see Supplementary Information.