Issue 47, 2013

Hydroxide ion flux and pH-gradient driven ester hydrolysis in polymer vesicle reactors

Abstract

In this article, we measured the hydroxide ion flux across poly(ethylene oxide-b-butadiene) (PEO-PBD) membranes, and characterized the magnitude of established pH gradients. In terms of permeability, PEO-PBD vesicles (polymersomes) are suitable polymeric analogues of lipid vesicles, with comparable permeabilities that can be tuned by varying the molecular weight (i.e. membrane thickness) of the polymer amphiphiles. PEO-PBD dispersions were found to be capable of maintaining gradients of up to 6 pH units for several weeks and their utility for partitioning acid-ionisable species inside polymer vesicles was demonstrated. Furthermore, pH gradients across vesicle membranes can be used to drive spatially-confined chemical reactions, and these gradients were used to facilitate the reaction of a fluorogenic compound, fluorescein diacetate, inside the high pH environment confined to the polymersome interior. In this sense, pH-gradient vesicles can act as artificial lysosomes, facilitating the collection and digestion of materials that can be hydrolysed in alkaline environments.

Graphical abstract: Hydroxide ion flux and pH-gradient driven ester hydrolysis in polymer vesicle reactors

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Jun 2013
Accepted
23 Oct 2013
First published
25 Oct 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 11295-11302

Hydroxide ion flux and pH-gradient driven ester hydrolysis in polymer vesicle reactors

W. F. Paxton, D. Price and N. J. Richardson, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 11295 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM51575C

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