1 research outputs found
Photoinitiated Polymerization-Induced Self-Assembly in the Presence of Surfactants Enables Membrane Protein Incorporation into Vesicles
Photoinitiated polymerization-induced
self-assembly (photo-PISA)
is an efficient approach to predictably prepare polymeric nanostructures
with a wide range of morphologies. Given that this process can be
performed at high concentrations and under mild reaction conditions,
it has the potential to have significant industrial scope. However,
given that the majority of industrial (and more specifically biotechnological)
formulations contain mixtures of polymers and surfactants, the effect
of such surfactants on the PISA process is an important consideration.
Thus, to expand the scope of the methodology, the effect of small
molecule surfactants on the PISA process, specifically for the preparation
of unilamellar vesicles, was investigated. Similar to aqueous photo-PISA
findings in the absence of surfactant molecules, the originally targeted
vesicular morphology was retained in the presence of varying concentrations
of non-ionic surfactants, while a diverse set of lower-order morphologies
was observed for ionic surfactants. Interestingly, a critical micelle
concentration (CMC)-dependent behavior was detected in the case of
zwitterionic detergents. Additionally, tunable size and membrane thickness
of vesicles were observed by using different types and concentration
of surfactants. Based on these findings, a functional channel-forming
membrane protein (OmpF porin), stabilized in aqueous media by surfactant
molecules, was able to be directly inserted into the membrane of vesicles
during photo-PISA. Our study demonstrates the potential of photo-PISA
for the direct formation of protein–polymer complexes and highlights
how this method could be used to design biomimicking polymer/surfactant
nanoreactors