Abstract

Polymer vesicles are of profound interest for designing delivery vehicles and nanoreactors toward a variety of biomedical and catalytic applications, yet robust synthesis of stable and permeable vesicles remains challenging. Here, we propose an electrostatic-templated polymerization that enables fabrication of polyelectrolyte vesicles with simultaneously regulated stability and permeability. In our design, cationic monomers were copolymerized with cross-linkers in the presence of a polyanionic-neutral diblock copolymer as a template. By properly choosing the block length ratio of the template, we fabricated a type of polyion complex vesicle consisting of a cross-linked cationic membrane, electrostatically assembled with the template copolymer which can be removed by sequential dissociation and separation under concentrated salt. We finally obtained stable polyelectrolyte vesicles of regulated size, membrane permeability, and response properties by tuning the synthesis factors including ionic strength, cross-linker type, and fraction as well as different monomers and concentrations. As a proof-of-concept, lipase was loaded in the designed cationic vesicles, which exhibited enhanced enzyme stability and activity. Our study has developed a novel and robust strategy for controllable synthesis of a new class of stable and permeable polymer (polyelectrolyte) vesicles that feature great potential applications as functional delivery carriers and nanoreactors.

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