Abstract

Biological and bioinspired polymer microparticles have broad biomedical and industrial applications, including drug delivery, tissue engineering, surface modification, environmental remediation, imaging, and sensing. Full realization of the potential of biopolymer microparticles will require methods for rigorous characterization of particle sizes, morphologies, and dynamics, so that researchers may correlate particle characteristics with synthesis methods and desired functions. Toward this end, we evaluated biopolymer microparticles using flow imaging microscopy. This technology is widely used in the biopharmaceutical industry but is not yet well-known among the materials community. Our polymer, a genetically engineered elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), self-assembles into micron-scale coacervates. We performed flow imaging of ELP coacervates using two different instruments, one with a lower size limit of approximately 2 microns, the other with a lower size limit of approximately 300 nanometers. We validated flow imaging results by comparison with dynamic light scattering and atomic force microscopy analyses. We explored the effects of various solvent conditions on ELP coacervate size, morphology, and behavior, such as the dispersion of single particles versus aggregates. We found that flow imaging is a superior tool for rapid and thorough particle analysis of ELP coacervates in solution. We anticipate that researchers studying many types of microscale protein or polymer assemblies will be interested in flow imaging as a tool for quantitative, solution-based characterization.

Highlights

  • While time was not a variable that we explored in this study, we believe that flow imaging microscopy would be an excellent tool to study the process of elastin-like polypeptide (ELP) coacervation over time

  • Having demonstrated that ELP coacervates are amenable to evaluation by flow imaging microscopy, we were able to gain further insight into the nature of the populations of particles observed in Dynamic light scattering (DLS) and AFM experiments

  • We looked at a single (VPGIG)40 polymer under different solution conditions

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Summary

Objectives

The primary goal of this study was to discover and describe the capabilities and limitations of flow imaging microscopy for ELP assemblies

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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