Effective screening methods for the development of glycopolymers
as molecular recognition materials are desirable for the discovery
of novel biofunctional materials. A glycopolymer library was prepared
to obtain guidelines for the design of glycopolymers for the recognition
of cholera toxin B subunits (CTB). Glycopolymers with varying ratios
of hydrophobic and sugar units were synthesized by reversible addition
fragmentation chain transfer polymerization. N-tert-Butylacrylamide, N-phenylacrylamide,
and N-cyclohexylacrylamide as hydrophobic units were
copolymerized in the polymer backbone, and galactose, which contributes
to CTB recognition, was introduced into the side chains by “post-click”
chemistry. The thiol-terminated glycopolymers were immobilized on
a gold surface. The polymer immobilization substrate was analyzed
in terms of interaction with galactose recognition proteins (CTB,
peanut agglutinin, and Ricinus communis agglutinin I) using surface plasmon resonance imaging. The polymers
with high ratios of sugar and hydrophobic units had the strongest
interactions with the CTB, which was different from the trend with
peanut agglutinin and Ricinus communis agglutinin I. The binding constant of the CTB with the glycopolymer
with hydrophobic units was 4.1 × 106 M–1, which was approximately eight times larger than that of the polymer
without hydrophobic units. A correlation was observed between the
log P value and the binding constant, indicating
that the hydrophobic interaction played an important role in binding.
New guidelines for the design of recognition materials were obtained
by our screening method.