A strategy
for encapsulating hydrophobic organic entities in aqueous
solution has been developed through use of a self-assembling heterotelechelic
amphiphilic random copolymer. The polymer (∼40 kDa), prepared
by living radical polymerization, contains orthogonally reactive terminal
groups and pendant hydrophobic (dodecyl), nonionic hydrophilic (PEG9),
and ionic hydrophilic (sulfonate-terminated) groups. Covalent conjugation
of a hydrophobic entity to the polymer terminus has been demonstrated
for 8 classes of organic fluorophores. The resulting “pod-fluorophore”
architecture is unimeric (∼15 nm in diameter) in aqueous solution
with spectral features and fluorescence brightness resembling those
of the benchmark fluorophore in organic solution. This strategy separates
the functional design of the packaged molecular entity (“cargo”)
from the often vexing challenge of water solubilization and in so
doing creates a unitary (one-pod–one-cargo) platform architecture
for potential applications in cytometry, biomedical imaging, environmental
sensing, and supramolecular chemistry