| Literature DB >> 35425260 |
Dominic M Gray1, Adam R Town1, Edyta Niezabitowska1, Steve P Rannard1,2, Tom O McDonald1.
Abstract
We report the synthesis of core-shell nanogels by sequential addition of thermoresponsive monomers; N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAM) and N-isopropylmethacrylamide (NIPMAM). The aggregation behaviour of aqueous dispersions of these particles in the presence of salt can be tuned by varying the monomer ratio. The inclusion of degradable cross-linker bis(acryloyl)cystamine (BAC) allows the nanogels to degrade in the presence of reducing agent, with nanogels composed of a copolymer of the two monomers not showing the same high levels of degradation as the comparable core-shell particles. These levels of degradation were also seen with physiologically relevant reducing agent concentration at pH 7. Therefore, it is hoped that the aggregation of these nanogels will have applications in nanomedicine and beyond. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35425260 PMCID: PMC8979186 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra07093b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1The synthesis of core–shell nanogels consisting of MAM (N-isopropylmethacrylamide) and PAM (N-isopropylacrylamide) and using N,N′-bis(acryloyl)cystamine (BAC) as the cross-linker. Different core–shell nanogels were synthesised by varying the ratio of core and shell monomers.
Reagent breakdown for each synthesised nanogel
| Sample | Monomer | BAC | KPS | SDS | Water | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NIPMAM | NIPAM | Core | Shell | Core | Shell | Core | Shell | Core | Shell | |
| MAM:PAM 100:0 | 34.7 mmol | — | 451.8 mg | — | 187.6 mg | — | 80 mg | — | 140 | — |
| 4.414 g | 1.735 mmol | 0.694 mmol | 0.277 mmol | |||||||
| MAM:PAM 70:30 | 3.087 g | 1.180 g | 316.28 mg | 135.54 mg | 131.4 mg | 56.28 mg | 56 mg | 24 mg | 98 | 42 |
| 24.29 mmol | 10.41 mmol | 1.215 mmol | 0.521 mmol | 0.486 mmol | 0.208 mmol | 0.194 mmol | 0.083 mmol | |||
| MAM:PAM 50:50 | 2.207 g | 1.963 g | 225.9 mg | 225.9 mg | 93.8 mg | 93.8 mg | 40 mg | 40 mg | 70 | 70 |
| 17.35 mmol | 17.35 mmol | 0.868 mmol | 0.868 mmol | 0.347 mmol | 0.347 mmol | 0.139 mmol | 0.139 mmol | |||
| MAM:PAM 30:70 | 1.324 g | 2.749 g | 135.54 mg | 316.26 mg | 56.2 mg | 131.38 mg | 24 mg | 56 mg | 42 | 98 |
| 10.41 mmol | 24.29 mmol | , 0.521 mmol | 1.215 mmol | 0.208 mmol | 0.486 mmol | 0.083 mmol | 0.194 mmol | |||
| MAM:PAM 15:85 | 0.6624 g | 3.340 g | 67.77 mg | 384.0 mg | 28.14 mg | 159.46 mg | 12 mg | 68 mg | 21 | 119 |
| 5.25 mmol | 29.50 mmol | 0.260 mmol | 1.475 mmol | 0.104 mmol | 0.590 mmol | 0.042 mmol | 0.236 mmol | |||
| PAM:MAM 100:0 | — | 3.924 g | 451.8 mg | — | 187.6 mg | — | 80 mg | — | — | 140 |
| 34.7 mmol | 1.735 mmol | 0.694 mmol | 0.277 mmol | |||||||
| PAM:MAM 50:50 | 2.207 g | 1.963 g | 225.9 mg | 225.9 mg | 93.8 mg | 93.8 mg | 40 mg | 40 mg | 70 | 70 |
| 17.35 mmol | 17.35 mmol | 0.868 mmol | 0.868 mmol | 0.347 mmol | 0.347 mmol | 0.139 mmol | 0.139 mmol | |||
34.7 mmol of total NIPAM and/or NIPMAM used in synthesis.
5% of monomer moles.
2% of monomer moles as 9.38 mg mL−1 aqueous solution.
160 mL total reaction volume including 20 mL aqueous KPS solution.
Composition and properties of degradable core–shell nanogels using the monomers NIPAM and NIPMAM
| Sample | NIPMAM | NIPAM | Hydrodynamic diameter | PDI | Zeta potential | Swelling ratio |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAM:PAM 100:0 | 100 | 0 | 143 ± 1.2 | 0.02 | −18 | 1.35 | 43 |
| MAM:PAM 70:30 | 70 | 30 | 205 ± 2.0 | 0.02 | −26 | 1.40 | 41 |
| MAM:PAM 50:50 | 50 | 50 | 153 ± 3.3 | 0.01 | −29 | 1.28 | 38 |
| MAM:PAM 30:70 | 30 | 70 | 171 ± 1.6 | 0.02 | −32 | 1.28 | 37 |
| MAM:PAM 15:85 | 15 | 85 | 173 ± 0.8 | 0.04 | −25 | 1.18 | 32 |
| PAM:MAM 100:0 | 0 | 100 | 82 ± 0.8 | 0.02 | −30 | 1.24 | 32 |
| PAM:MAM 50:50 | 50 | 50 | 213 ± 5.4 | 0.03 | −19 | 1.50 | 42 |
mol% based on total moles (34.7 mmol) of NIPMAM and NIPAM, excludes moles of cross-linker and initiator used.
Hydrodynamic diameter of an aqueous dispersion at 25 °C and 1 mg mL−1 using DLS with the mean value of triplicate measurements. Particle size distribution graphs shown in ESI Fig. 1
Standard deviation from running of sample in triplicate.
Nanogels were analysed as a 1 mg mL−1 aqueous dispersion using 1 mM NaCl background electrolyte concentration at 25 °C.
Swelling ratio calculated using Dh (hydrodynamic diameter). Dh (15 °C)/Dh (55 °C).
Fig. 2Swelling ratio against temperature of various core–shell nanogels. Swelling ratio was calculated using Dh values of the nanogels at that temperature compared to the value at 55 °C.
Fig. 3The effect of nanogel structure and composition with varying monomer ratio of core and shell additions of NIPAM and NIPMAM on the Tagg. MAM:PAM denoting a NIPMAM core and NIPAM shell and reversed for PAM:PAM nanogels.
Table of dispersion analyses before and after degradation at pH 10 and 150 mM DTT concentration. Conversion obtained by 1H NMR included also
| Sample | Residual derived count rate |
|
| Conversion by 1H NMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAM:MAM 100:0 | 25% | 90 (0.02) | 125 (0.03) | PAM 35% |
| MAM:PAM 100:0 | 2.5% | 143 (0.02) | 163 (0.34) | MAM 56%, BAC 85% |
| MAM:PAM 15:85 | 5.6% | 173 (0.04) | 173 (0.23) | 1 h = MAM 55% and BAC 85% |
| Final = MAM 69%, PAM 19% | ||||
| MAM:PAM 15:85 not core–shell | 24% | 105 (0.02) | 186 (0.02) | MAM 46% |
| PAM 30% |
BAC conversion could not be estimated due to the overlap of 1H NMR peaks with NIPAM.
Fig. 4Particle size distributions of nanogels before degradation at 1 mg mL−1 at 25 °C pH 7 (black), and after degradation at 1 mg mL−1 concentration, 25 °C, 150 mM DTT concentration at pH 10 (red) of particles; (A) PAM:MAM 100:0, (B) MAM:PAM 100:0, (C) MAM:PAM 15:85, and (D) MAM:PAM 15:85 reagent quantities but not as core–shell particles.
Fig. 5Overview of 15:85 MAM:PAM core–shell nanogel degradation over time at pH 7 and 10 mM DTT concentration. (A) Residual derived count rate over degradation time, (B) Dh and PDI of nanogel dispersion over degradation time, (C) representation of particle number and distribution over degradation time, and (D) average particle size or degradation product.