Investigation of the Local Environment of Hydrophobic
End Groups on Polyethylene Glycol (PEG) Brushes Using Fluorometry:
Relationship to Click Chemistry Conjugation Reactions on PEG-Protected
Nanoparticles
Posted on 2015-05-19 - 00:00
Targeted nanoparticles often require
conjugating targeting ligands to polyethylene glycol (PEG) chains
of a nanoparticle’s dense protecting corona. “Click”
chemistries are commonly employed for their bioorthogonality, with
strain-promoted azide–alkyne cycloadditions (SPAAC) increasingly
chosen to avoid cytotoxic copper catalysts. However, conjugation becomes
compromised if reactive PEG chain ends cannot encounter their reaction
counterparts. We use fluorescence to probe the location of Nile Red,
methylpyrene, and butylpyrene, dyes with comparable hydrophobicities
to SPAAC alkynes (logP = 3.2–5.7), tethered to PEG chains on
100 nm NPs. Using fluorescence peak shifts, we find that Nile Red
resides 43% of the time in the 5k PEG corona and 57% at the more hydrophobic
nanoparticle core. Increasing the PEG MW to 67k doubles the corona
dye fraction to 86% (14% core). More hydrophobic methylpyrene and
butylpyrene, monitored with I1/I3 ratios, reside 1% in the corona
(99% core). These results explain difficulties with using SPAAC reactions
for conjugating large ligands to nanoparticles with PEG coronae.
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Chen, Christopher V.
H.-H.; Triana, Brian P.; Prud’homme, Robert K. (2016). Investigation of the Local Environment of Hydrophobic
End Groups on Polyethylene Glycol (PEG) Brushes Using Fluorometry:
Relationship to Click Chemistry Conjugation Reactions on PEG-Protected
Nanoparticles. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.5b00119