textjournal article
Hydrophobically Modified Biodegradable Poly(ethylene glycol) Copolymers that Form Temperature-Responsive Nanogels
Abstract
Biodegradable copolymers consisting of a hydrophilic poly[l-aspartic acid-alt-poly(ethylene glycol)] (poly(l-Asp-alt-PEG)) backbone and hydrophobic capryl units as side chains were synthesized. The amphiphilic copolymer was found to form nanosized hydrogel particles (nanogels) of approximately 15 nm in size by self-assembly at 20 °C in aqueous media, and the nanogel solutions displayed phase-transition in response to temperature. The transition of the nanogel solution was reversible and tunable in the range from 19 to 55 °C by variation of the amounts of capryl units introduced and the solution concentration. The nanogels were gradually degraded within days in a phosphate buffer solution (PBS) at 37 °C. Temperature-responsive biodegradable nanogel systems consisting of biocompatible PEG may have potential utility for high biocompatibility temperature-responsive nanodevices such as microreactor systems, molecular-chaperones, and drug delivery vehicles- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biophysics
- Biochemistry
- Microbiology
- Biotechnology
- Ecology
- Mental Health
- Virology
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Physical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- phosphate buffer solution
- glycol
- form nanosized hydrogel particles
- drug delivery vehicles
- PBS
- poly
- PEG
- capryl units
- nanogel