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Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization

There is a great interest in incorporating catechol moieties into polymers in a controlled manner due to their interesting properties, such as the promotion of adhesion, redox activity or bioactivity. One possibility is to incorporate the catechol as end-group in a polymer chain using a functional i...

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Autores principales: Sadaba, Naroa, Salsamendi, Maitane, Casado, Nerea, Zuza, Ester, Muñoz, Jone, Sarasua, Jose-Ramon, Mecerreyes, David, Mantione, Daniele, Detrembleur, Christophe, Sardon, Haritz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6415175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30966191
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym10020155
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author Sadaba, Naroa
Salsamendi, Maitane
Casado, Nerea
Zuza, Ester
Muñoz, Jone
Sarasua, Jose-Ramon
Mecerreyes, David
Mantione, Daniele
Detrembleur, Christophe
Sardon, Haritz
author_facet Sadaba, Naroa
Salsamendi, Maitane
Casado, Nerea
Zuza, Ester
Muñoz, Jone
Sarasua, Jose-Ramon
Mecerreyes, David
Mantione, Daniele
Detrembleur, Christophe
Sardon, Haritz
author_sort Sadaba, Naroa
collection PubMed
description There is a great interest in incorporating catechol moieties into polymers in a controlled manner due to their interesting properties, such as the promotion of adhesion, redox activity or bioactivity. One possibility is to incorporate the catechol as end-group in a polymer chain using a functional initiator by means of controlled polymerization strategies. Nevertheless, the instability of catechol moieties under oxygen and basic pH requires tedious protection and deprotection steps to perform the polymerization in a controlled fashion. In the present work, we explore the organocatalyzed synthesis of catechol end-functional, semi-telechelic polylactide (PLLA) using non-protected dopamine, catechol molecule containing a primary amine, as initiator. NMR and SEC-IR results showed that in the presence of a weak organic base such as triethylamine, the ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of lactide takes place in a controlled manner without need of protecting the cathechol units. To further confirm the end-group fidelity the catechol containing PLLA was characterized by Cyclic Voltammetry and MALDI-TOF confirming the absence of side reaction during the polymerization. In order to exploit the potential of catechol moieties, catechol end-group of PLLA was oxidized to quinone and further reacted with aliphatic amines. In addition, we also confirmed the ability of catechol functionalized PLLA to reduce metal ions to metal nanoparticles to obtain well distributed silver nanoparticles. It is expected that this new route of preparing catechol-PLLA polymers without protection will increase the accessibility of catechol containing biodegradable polymers by ROP.
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spelling pubmed-64151752019-04-02 Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization Sadaba, Naroa Salsamendi, Maitane Casado, Nerea Zuza, Ester Muñoz, Jone Sarasua, Jose-Ramon Mecerreyes, David Mantione, Daniele Detrembleur, Christophe Sardon, Haritz Polymers (Basel) Article There is a great interest in incorporating catechol moieties into polymers in a controlled manner due to their interesting properties, such as the promotion of adhesion, redox activity or bioactivity. One possibility is to incorporate the catechol as end-group in a polymer chain using a functional initiator by means of controlled polymerization strategies. Nevertheless, the instability of catechol moieties under oxygen and basic pH requires tedious protection and deprotection steps to perform the polymerization in a controlled fashion. In the present work, we explore the organocatalyzed synthesis of catechol end-functional, semi-telechelic polylactide (PLLA) using non-protected dopamine, catechol molecule containing a primary amine, as initiator. NMR and SEC-IR results showed that in the presence of a weak organic base such as triethylamine, the ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of lactide takes place in a controlled manner without need of protecting the cathechol units. To further confirm the end-group fidelity the catechol containing PLLA was characterized by Cyclic Voltammetry and MALDI-TOF confirming the absence of side reaction during the polymerization. In order to exploit the potential of catechol moieties, catechol end-group of PLLA was oxidized to quinone and further reacted with aliphatic amines. In addition, we also confirmed the ability of catechol functionalized PLLA to reduce metal ions to metal nanoparticles to obtain well distributed silver nanoparticles. It is expected that this new route of preparing catechol-PLLA polymers without protection will increase the accessibility of catechol containing biodegradable polymers by ROP. MDPI 2018-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6415175/ /pubmed/30966191 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym10020155 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sadaba, Naroa
Salsamendi, Maitane
Casado, Nerea
Zuza, Ester
Muñoz, Jone
Sarasua, Jose-Ramon
Mecerreyes, David
Mantione, Daniele
Detrembleur, Christophe
Sardon, Haritz
Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title_full Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title_fullStr Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title_full_unstemmed Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title_short Catechol End-Functionalized Polylactide by Organocatalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization
title_sort catechol end-functionalized polylactide by organocatalyzed ring-opening polymerization
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6415175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30966191
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym10020155
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