Boron-based poly(asymmetric substituted glycolide) nanospheres†
Abstract
Boron-based asymmetrically structured poly(substituted glycolide) homopolymers (BF2I-PASG) were prepared from a library of asymmetric substituted glycolide (ASG, I–VI) monomers (linear alkyl (propyl methyl-I and propyl ethyl-II) or branched (isobutyl methyl-III, isobutyl ethyl-IV, isoleucine methyl-V, and isoleucine ethyl-VI) glycolide), which have an analogous structure to lactide (LA) and glycolide (GA), using BF2dbmOEtOH (BF2I) as the initiator in the presence of the Sn(Oct)2 catalyst in a solvent-free environment. The presence of amorphous BF2I-PASG, with a glass transition temperature (Tg) ranging from 4.1 to 31.9 °C determined by DSC analysis, suggested its suitability for short-term drug release. This amorphous character is attributed to the asymmetric structure of monomers I–VI, which incorporate various substituted side groups on the GA rings. The thermal stability (i.e., Td) of BF2I-PASG was examined by TGA analysis, revealing a single-step degradation that shifted towards higher Td values, from 346 °C to 377 °C, as the length of the alkyl side group on the polymer backbone increased. BF2I-PASGs exhibit high extinction coefficients of up to 53 750 M−1 cm−1, demonstrating strong π–π* transitions and intense blue fluorescence, with fluorescence lifetimes following a single-exponential decay as high as 1.96 ns and good quantum yields of up to 75%. Moreover, the nanoparticles (NPs) of these polymers possess a smooth surface and regular spherical shape, with average diameters as small as 236 nm, low and narrow polydispersity indices (PDI) ranging from 0.062 to 0.136, and a drug loading capacity of approximately ≥5%. For example, the NPs exhibited a rapid release profile for the anticancer drug paclitaxel, with around 82.1–96.2 of the drug released within approximately 5 days, depending on the NP composition.