Hybrid Poly(<i>β</i>‐amino ester) Triblock Copolymers Utilizing a RAFT Polymerization Grafting‐From Methodology

Abstract

The biocompatibility, biodegradability, and responsiveness of poly(β‐amino esters) (PBAEs) has led to their widespread use as biomaterials for drug and gene delivery. Nonetheless, the step‐growth polymerization mechanism that yields PBAEs limits the scope for their structural optimization toward specific applications because of limited monomer choice and end‐group modifications. Moreover, to date the post‐synthetic functionalization of PBAEs has relied on grafting‐to approaches, challenged by the need for efficient polymer–polymer coupling and potentially difficult post‐conjugation purification. Here a novel grafting‐from approach to grow reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymers from a PBAE scaffold is described. This is achieved through PBAE conversion into a macromolecular chain transfer agent through a multistep capping procedure, followed by RAFT polymerization with a range of monomers to produce PBAE–RAFT hybrid triblock copolymers. Following successful synthesis, the potential biological applications of these ABA triblock copolymers are illustrated through assembly into polymeric micelles and encapsulation of a model hydrophobic drug, followed by successful nanoparticle (NP) uptake in breast cancer cells. The findings demonstrate this novel synthetic methodology can expand the scope of PBAEs as biomaterials

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