| Literature DB >> 32863465 |
Marco S Messina1,2, Kathryn M M Messina1,2, Arvind Bhattacharya1,2, Hayden R Montgomery1,2, Heather D Maynard1,2.
Abstract
Biomolecule-polymer conjugates are constructs that take advantage of the functional or otherwise beneficial traits inherent to biomolecules and combine them with synthetic <span class="Chemical">polymers possessing specially tailored properties. The rapid development of novel biomolecule-polymer conjugates based on proteins, peptides, or nucleic acids has ushered in a variety of unique materials, which exhibit functional attributes including thermo-responsiveness, exceptional stability, and specialized specificity. Key to the synthesis of new biomolecule-polymer hybrids is the use of controlled polymerization techniques coupled with either grafting-from, grafting-to, or grafting-through methodology, each of which exhibit distinct advantages and/or disadvantages. In this review, we present recent progress in the development of biomolecule-polymer conjugates with a focus on works that have detailed the use of grafting-from methods employing ATRP, RAFT, or ROMP.Entities:
Keywords: DNA-polymer conjugates; Grafting-from; bioconjugate; peptide-polymer conjugates; protein-polymer conjugates
Year: 2019 PMID: 32863465 PMCID: PMC7453843 DOI: 10.1016/j.progpolymsci.2019.101186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Polym Sci ISSN: 0079-6700 Impact factor: 29.190