Polymers with repeating phosphoester linkages in the backbone are biodegradable and emerged as a promising class of novel biomaterials. In contrast to polyesters, the pentavalency of the phosphorus atom offers a large diversity of structures and as a consequence a wide range of properties for these materials. This study aims at taking profit of this easy functionalization to synthesize a series of degradable polymers of precisely tailored properties especially elasticity, hydrophilicity and functionality. We aim at developing a set of degradable materials in which only elasticity is varied keeping unchanged other parameters such as hydrophilicity, which remains quite a challenge.
For that purpose, we have synthesized by organocatalyzed ring-opening polymerization,random di- and terpolymers between various cyclic phosphoesters bearing a short side-chain (hydrophilic), a longer side-chain (hydrophobic) and an unsaturated side-chain (butenyl)able to cross-link under UV irradiation. Playing on the composition of these copolymers, the cross-linking density and the hydrophilicity can be tuned quite independently. In the future, these materials will be used as model scaffolds to study the growth and differentiation of stem cells