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Download fileDirectly Observing Micelle Fusion and Growth in Solution by Liquid-Cell Transmission Electron Microscopy
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posted on 2017-11-16, 02:52 authored by Lucas
R. Parent, Evangelos Bakalis, Abelardo Ramírez-Hernández, Jacquelin K. Kammeyer, Chiwoo Park, Juan de Pablo, Francesco Zerbetto, Joseph P. Patterson, Nathan C. GianneschiAmphiphilic small
molecules and polymers form commonplace nanoscale
macromolecular compartments and bilayers, and as such are truly essential
components in all cells and in many cellular processes. The nature
of these architectures, including their formation, phase changes,
and stimuli-response behaviors, is necessary for the most basic functions
of life, and over the past half-century, these natural micellar structures
have inspired a vast diversity of industrial products, from biomedicines
to detergents, lubricants, and coatings. The importance of these materials
and their ubiquity have made them the subject of intense investigation
regarding their nanoscale dynamics with increasing interest in obtaining
sufficient temporal and spatial resolution to directly observe nanoscale
processes. However, the vast majority of experimental methods involve
either bulk-averaging techniques including light, neutron, and X-ray
scattering, or are static in nature including even the most advanced
cryogenic transmission electron microscopy techniques. Here, we employ
in situ liquid-cell transmission electron microscopy (LCTEM) to directly
observe the evolution of individual amphiphilic block copolymer micellar
nanoparticles in solution, in real time with nanometer spatial resolution.
These observations, made on a proof-of-concept bioconjugate polymer
amphiphile, revealed growth and evolution occurring by unimer addition
processes and by particle–particle collision-and-fusion events.
The experimental approach, combining direct LCTEM observation, quantitative
analysis of LCTEM data, and correlated in silico simulations, provides
a unique view of solvated soft matter nanoassemblies as they morph
and evolve in time and space, enabling us to capture these phenomena
in solution.
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micellar structuresstimuli-response behaviorsphase changesproof-of-concept bioconjugate polymer amphiphilenanoscale dynamicssilico simulationsevolutionsolutionLiquid-Cell Transmission Electron Microscopy Amphiphiliccryogenic transmission electron microscopy techniquesMicelle Fusionmatter nanoassembliesnatureLCTEM observationnanoscale processesamphiphilic block copolymer micellar nanoparticlesliquid-cell transmission electron microscopypolymers formbulk-averaging techniquesunimer addition processesLCTEM data