Abstract

A family of amphiphilic ABCBA pentablock copolymers based on commercially available Pluronic ® F127 block copolymers and various amine containing methacrylate monomers was synthesized via Cu(I) mediated controlled radical polymerization. The block architecture and chemical composition of the pentablock copolymers were engineered to exhibit both temperature and pH responsive self-assembly by exploiting the lower critical solution temperature of the poly(ethylene oxide)/poly(propylene oxide) blocks and the polycationic property of the poly(amine methacrylate) blocks, respectively. In aqueous solutions, the pentablock copolymers formed temperature and pH-responsive micelles. Concentrated aqueous solutions of the copolymer formed a pH-responsive, thermoreversible gel phase. The controlled radical synthesis route yielded well-defined copolymers with narrow molecular weight distributions with the benefit of mild reaction conditions. Small angle X-ray scattering, laser light scattering, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy and dynamic mechanical analysis have been used to characterize the self-assembled structures of the micellar solution and gel phases of the aqueous copolymer system. These copolymers have potential applications in controlled drug delivery and non-viral gene therapy due to their tunable phase behavior and biocompatibility.

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