Nonequilibrium
Reshaping of Polymersomes via Polymer Addition
Posted on 2019-11-11 - 12:37
Polymersomes are
a class of artificial liposomes, assembled from
amphiphilic synthetic block copolymers, holding great promise toward
applications in nanomedicine. The diversity in polymersome morphological
shapes and, in particular, the precise control of these shapes, which
is an important aspect in drug delivery studies, remains a great challenge.
This is due to a lack of general methodologies that can be applied
and the inability to capture the morphologies at the nanometer scale.
Here, we present a methodology that can accurately control the shape
of polymersomes via the addition of polyethylene
glycol (PEG) under nonequilibrium conditions. Various shapes including
spheres, ellipsoids, tubes, discs, stomatocytes, nests, stomatocyte-in-stomatocytes,
disc-in-discs, and large compound vesicles (LCVs) can be uniformly
captured by adjusting the water content and the PEG concentration.
Moreover, these shapes undergo nonequilibrium changes in time, which
is reflected in their phase diagram changes. This research provides
a universal tool to fabricate all shapes of polymersomes by controlling
three variables: water content, PEG concentration, and time. The use
of the biofriendly polymer PEG enables the application of this methodology
in the field of nanomedicine.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Men, Yongjun; Li, Wei; Tu, Yingfeng; Peng, Fei; Janssen, Geert-Jan A.; Nolte, Roeland J. M.; et al. (2019). Nonequilibrium
Reshaping of Polymersomes via Polymer Addition. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b04740Â