Abstract
AbstractThe compartmentalization of colloids into topologically closed, vesicular, microphases offers an attractive mean to concentrate a functional cargo in aqueous solutions for a range of biomedical, cosmetic, and biotechnological applications. In this paper, we develop a simple, phospholipid‐free, phase change method employing a pH‐responsive glycolipid. The method is applied to the encapsulation of a sonicated, metastable, aqueous dispersion of functional colloids in the lumen of lipid vesicles: uncoated magnetic maghemite γ‐Fe2O3 and oleic‐acid coated upconverting NaYF4 : Yb/Ln (Ln=Er or Tm) nanoparticles (NPs). We find a stable liposomal dispersion containing a sub‐population of crowded liposomes with high concentrations of NPs. The encapsulated NPs, formed at nearly neutral pH and room temperature, are stable over time and towards extrusion. The vesicular microphase is entirely composed of pH‐responsive glycolipids, which undergo a pH‐mediated mesoscopic structural transition from an open lamellar (2<pH<4) to topologically closed vesicular state (pH>4). We also show that encapsulation successfully works with a stable colloidal aqueous dispersion of iron clusters stabilized in ferritin cages. This compartmentalization approach combining self‐assembly with an orthogonal nonequilibrium dispersion of nanoparticles shows untapped potential for synthesizing unusual classes of mixed matter.
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