Polymeric antimicrobial peptide mimics are a promising alternative for the future management of the daunting problems associated with antimicrobial resistance. However, the development of successful antimicrobial polymers (APs) requires careful control of factors such as amphiphilic balance, molecular weight, dispersity, sequence, and architecture. While most of the earlier developed APs focused on random linear copolymers, the development of APs with advanced architectures proved to be more potent in the mimicry of antimicrobial peptides. We recently developed multivalent bottlebrush APs with improved antibacterial and hemocompatibility profiles, outperforming their linear counterparts. Understanding the rationale behind the outstanding biological activity of these newly developed antimicrobials is vital to further improving their performance. This work investigates the physicochemical properties governing the differences in activity between linear and bottlebrush architectures using diverse spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. Linear copolymers are more solvated, thermo-responsive and possess facial amphiphilicity resulting in random aggregations when interacting with liposomes mimicking E. coli-membranes. The bottlebrush copolymers adopt a more stable secondary conformation in aqueous solution in comparison to linear copolymers, conferring rapid and more specific binding mechanism to membranes. The advantageous physicochemical properties of the bottlebrush topology seem to be a determinant factor in the activity of these promising APs.
Patchy Particles In article number 2301761, Alexander Böker, Matthias Hartlieb, Martin Reifarth, and co-workers provide a modified microcontact printing (μCP) routine, which they use to introduce highly functional patches on silicon dioxide (SiO2) microspheres. The μCP method uses a polymer brush-functionalized elastomeric stamp, whose surface features have been optimized to print amino-functional moieties to oxide surfaces in a locally precise fashion. The introduced patch functions are used for further functionalization, as different acrylic acid-derived polymer materials are grafted from the patch site using photo-iniferter reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer (PI-RAFT) polymerization.
Abstract In this paper, the phenomenon of light‐driven diffusioosmotic (DO) long‐range attractive and repulsive interactions between micro‐sized objects trapped near a solid wall is investigated. The range of the DO flow extends several times the size of microparticles and can be adjusted to point towards or away from the particle by varying irradiation parameters such as intensity or wavelength of light. The “fuel” of the light‐driven DO flow is a photosensitive surfactant which can be photo‐isomerized between trans and cis ‐states. The trans ‐isomer tends to accumulate at the interface, while the cis ‐isomer prefers to stay in solution. In combination with a dissimilar photo‐isomerization rate at the interface and in bulk, this yields a concentration gradient of the isomers around single particles resulting in local light‐driven diffusioosmotic ( l ‐LDDO) flow. Here, the extended analysis of the l ‐LDDO flow as a function of irradiation parameters by introducing time‐dependent development of the concentration excess of isomers near the particle surface is presented. It is also demonstrated that the l ‐LDDO can be generated at any solid/liquid interface being more pronounced in the case of strongly absorbing material. This phenomenon has plenty of potential applications since it makes any type of surface act as a micropump.
Here, we investigate the kinetics of adsorption and desorption of a cationic photosensitive azobenzene-containing surfactant within anionic microgels in the dark and under continuous illumination with light of different wavelengths and show that microgels can serve as a selective absorber of one of the possible isomers of the photosensitive surfactant. The adsorption of the isomer is governed by entropic reasons at which micellization of the surfactant takes place within the microgel matrix composed of cross-linked PNIPAM and anionic poly(acryl acid) chains rendering it photoresponsive. Under irradiation with appropriate wavelength, the surfactant molecules photoisomerize from trans (hydrophobic)- to cis (hydrophilic)-state and the microgel collapses due to diffusion of the cis-isomers out of the particle interior. When the light is switched off, the microgels swell back to the equilibrium size by absorbing the rest of the trans-isomers out of solution with the characteristic time being between a few seconds and hours depending on the amount of the trans-isomers left in the solution. Measuring the kinetics of the microgel size response and knowing the exact isomer composition under light exposure, we calculate the adsorption rate of the trans-isomers. We show that depending on the intensity of the applied light, one can differentiate between two processes, i.e., at low intensities, the kinetics of the size change is mostly dominated by the photoisomerization rate of the surfactant within the interior of the particle, while at larger intensities, the process is limited by the surfactant adsorption/desorption rate. By performing temperature-dependent measurements, we also calculate the activation energy of the adsorption/desorption process.
Here we show that microgels trapped at a solid wall can issue liquid flow and transport over distances several times larger than the particle size. The microgel consists of cross-linked poly(N-isopropylacrylamide-co-acrylic acid) (PNIPAM-AA) polymer chains loaded with cationic azobenzene-containing surfactant, which can assume either a trans- or a cis-state depending on the wavelength of the applied irradiation. The microgel, being a selective absorber of trans-isomers, responds by changing its volume under irradiation with light of appropriate wavelength at which the cis-isomers of the surfactant molecules diffuse out of the particle interior. Together with the change in particle size, the expelled cis-isomers form an excess of the concentration and subsequent gradient in osmotic pressure generating a halo of local light-driven diffusioosmotic (l-LDDO) flow. The direction and the strength of the l-LDDO depends on the intensity and irradiation wavelength, as well as on the amount of surfactant absorbed by the microgel. The flow pattern around a microgel is directed radially outward and can be maintained quasi-indefinitely under exposure to blue light when the trans-/cis-ratio is 2/1, establishing a photostationary state. Irradiation with UV light, on the other hand, generates a radially transient flow pattern, which inverts from inward to outward over time at low intensities. By measuring the displacement of tracer particles around neutral microgels during a temperature-induced collapse, we can exclude that a change in particle shape itself causes the flow, i.e., just by expulsion or uptake of water. Ultimately, it is its ability to selectively absorb two isomers of photosensitive surfactant under different irradiation conditions that leads to an effective pumping caused by a self-induced diffusioosmotic flow.
We report on photoisomerization kinetics of azobenzene containing surfactants in aqueous solution. The surfactant molecule consists of a positively charged trimethylammonium bromide head group, a hydrophobic spacer connecting via 6 to 10 CH2 groups to the azobenzene unit, and the hydrophobic tail of 1 and 3CH2 groups. Under exposure to light, the azobenzene photoisomerizes from more stable trans- to metastable cis-state, which can be switched back either thermally in dark or by illumination with light of a longer wavelength. The surfactant isomerization is described by a kinetic model of a pseudo first order reaction approaching equilibrium, where the intensity controls the rate of isomerization until the equilibrated state. The rate constants of the trans-cis and cis-trans photoisomerization are calculated as a function of several parameters such as wavelength and intensity of light, the surfactant concentration, and the length of the hydrophobic tail. The thermal relaxation rate from cis- to trans-state is studied as well. The surfactant isomerization shows a different kinetic below and above the critical micellar concentration of the trans isomer due to steric hindrance within the densely packed micelle but does not depend on the spacer length.
Flow control is a highly relevant topic for micromanipulation of colloidal particles in microfluidic applications. Here, we report on a system that combines two-surface bound flows emanating from thermo-osmotic and diffusio-osmotic mechanisms. These opposing flows are generated at a gold surface immersed into an aqueous solution containing a photo-sensitive surfactant, which is irradiated by a focused UV laser beam. At low power of incoming light, diffusio-osmotic flow due to local photo-isomerization of the surfactant dominates, resulting in a flow pattern oriented away from the irradiated area. In contrast, thermo-osmotic flow takes over due to local heating of the gold surface at larger power, consequently inducing a flow pointing toward the hotspot. In this way, this system allows one to reversibly switch from outward to inward liquid flow with an intermittent range of zero flow at which tracer particles undergo thermal motion by just tuning the laser intensity only. Our work, thus, demonstrates an optofluidic system for flow generation with a high degree of controllability that is necessary to transport particles precisely to desired locations, thereby opening innovative possibilities to generate advanced microfluidic applications.
Nanoparticles (NPs) have great potential for biological applications as typically they exhibit strongly size-dependent properties. Specifically, the interaction of NPs with phospholipid membranes is significantly relevant to nanomedicine and the related field of nanotoxicology. Therefore, the investigation of interactions of NPs with model membranes is not only fundamentally important but also practically valuable to understand interactions of NPs with more complex cell membranes. Here, we report on the interaction of anionic vesicles of different charge densities and cationic SiO2 NPs, either covered by a bare surface functionalized with amino moieties (-NH2) or covered by poly[2-(dimethylamino) ethyl methacrylate]. We studied the kinetics of binding of NPs to the vesicle surface by time-resolved scattering experiments. A key result of the study is that binding is favored in the presence of electrostatic attraction, but the polymer layer decreases the binding rate drastically.
Flow control is a highly relevant topic for micromanipulation of colloidal particles in microfluidic applications. Here, we report on a system that combines two-surface bound flows emanating from thermo-osmotic and diffusio-osmotic mechanisms. These opposing flows are generated at a gold surface immersed into an aqueous solution containing a photo-sensitive surfactant, which is irradiated by a focused UV laser beam. At low power of incoming light, diffusio-osmotic flow due to local photo-isomerization of the surfactant dominates, resulting in a flow pattern oriented away from the irradiated area. In contrast, thermo-osmotic flow takes over due to local heating of the gold surface at larger power, consequently inducing a flow pointing toward the hotspot. In this way, this system allows one to reversibly switch from outward to inward liquid flow with an intermittent range of zero flow at which tracer particles undergo thermal motion by just tuning the laser intensity only. Our work, thus, demonstrates an optofluidic system for flow generation with a high degree of controllability that is necessary to transport particles precisely to desired locations, thereby opening innovative possibilities to generate advanced microfluidic applications.