A series of pH-responsive amphiphilic
poly(<i>N</i>,<i>N</i>-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate)-<i>block</i>-poly(d-lactic acid)-<i>block</i>-poly(<i>N</i>,<i>N</i>-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate)
conjugated
with poly(ethylene glycol) (D-PDLA-D@PEG) and D-PLLA-D@PEG copolymers
were synthesized using a combination of ring-opening polymerization
and atom-transfer radical polymerization followed by sequential quaternization
of PDMAEMA chains and azide–alkyne click reaction with alkyne-end
PEG. Gel permeation chromatography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy results demonstrate the successful
synthesis of the copolymers, and the conjugated PEG percentages in
the copolymers can be tuned by the feeding ratios in the quaternization
reaction. Conjugating PEG onto the PDMAEMA segments also successfully
facilitated the D-PDLA-D@PEG, D-PLLA-D@PEG, and its corresponding
1:1 D/L mixtures to be dissolved directly in aqueous solution at the
desired concentration range without using any organic solvents unlike
the copolymers without PEG conjugation (D-PDLA-D and D-PLLA-D). We
demonstrate control over micellar size, charge, and stability via
three different preparation pathways, i.e., solution pH, percentages
of PEG conjugation in the copolymers, and formation of PLA stereocomplex
in micellar core. Static and dynamic light scattering studies demonstrate
that the size of the core–shell micelles increases when the
solution pH is reduced due to the protonation of the PDMAEMA segments
that caused the osmotic pressure within the micelle to increase until
the micelles reached a maximum size. It is interesting to note that
the micelles formed by 1:1 D/L mixtures have larger swelling ratios
as well as aggregation number and hydrodynamic radius that do not
change significantly with pH and dilution, respectively, as compared
to micelles formed from individual D or L forms of the copolymers.
The enhanced stability of the pH-responsive micelles prepared by direct
dissolution of the 1:1 D/L mixtures of the PEG conjugated PLA-based
polyelectrolytes in aqueous medium is attributed to the stereocomplex
formation between PLLA and PDLA in the micellar core as confirmed
by wide-angle X-ray scattering measurements