Publication | Open Access
Encapsidated Atom-Transfer Radical Polymerization in Qβ Virus-like Nanoparticles
87
Citations
56
References
2014
Year
Nm-diameter Qβ VlpSynthetic MacromoleculeEngineeringMacromolecular EngineeringProtein NanoparticlesQβ Virus-like NanoparticlesPolymer ScienceResponsive PolymersDrug Delivery SystemsUnique Macromolecular StructuresVirus-like ParticlesGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringPolymerization KineticsMedicinePolymer ChemistryBiomolecular EngineeringPolymers
Virus-like particles (VLPs) are unique macromolecular structures that hold great promise in biomedical and biomaterial applications. The interior of the 30 nm-diameter Qβ VLP was functionalized by a three-step process: (1) hydrolytic removal of endogenously packaged RNA, (2) covalent attachment of initiator molecules to unnatural amino acid residues located on the interior capsid surface, and (3) atom-transfer radical polymerization of tertiary amine-bearing methacrylate monomers. The resulting polymer-containing particles were moderately expanded in size; however, biotin-derivatized polymer strands were only very weakly accessible to avidin, suggesting that most of the polymer was confined within the protein shell. The polymer-containing particles were also found to exhibit physical and chemical properties characteristic of positively charged nanostructures, including the ability to easily enter mammalian cells and deliver functional small interfering RNA.
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