posted on 2025-04-17, 13:43authored byPing Zhang, Han Yan, Zhihe Liang, Peng Zhang, Xiao-Hua Li, Xian-Zheng Yuan, Guangli Yu, Wei Wang, Chao Cai
Synthetic
glycopolymers can be designed to mimic the
structure
and biological function of natural polysaccharides, offering a wide
range of potential applications in the pharmaceutical and medicine.
Nevertheless, amphiphilic synthetic glycopolymers commonly form biologically
inert nanomicelle structures in aqueous solutions through spontaneous
self-assembly. Envisioning that preventing self-assembly is pivotal
to the full realization of the biological activities of the glycopolymers,
we design and prepare a class of norbornene-derived hydrophilic glycopolymers
containing sulfated fucose amenable to skeleton modification through
ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP). The skeleton of the
fucoidan glycopolymers was chemically modified with hydrogen reduction,
dihydroxylation, and oxidation following subsequent sulfation. We
conducted physicochemical property characterization of the skeleton-modified
glycopolymers to demonstrate that the hydrophilic glycopolymers have
a more flexible structure compared to conventional polymers, and the
sulfated fucoidan glycopolymers form a non-assembly morphology similar
to the natural polysaccharides. Furthermore, the non-assembly glycopolymers
exhibit significantly enhanced anti-HSV-1 activities. Our findings
underscore the significance of the rational design of polymer skeletons
in the development of structural and functional mimics of natural
polysaccharides.