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Dive into the research topics where Michael Malkoch is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Malkoch.


Chemical Communications | 2006

Synthesis of well-defined hydrogel networks using Click chemistry

Michael Malkoch; Robert Vestberg; Nalini Gupta; Laetitia Mespouille; Philipe Dubois; Andrew F. Mason; James L. Hedrick; Qi Liao; Curtis W. Frank; Kevin Kingsbury; Craig J. Hawker

New PEG-based hydrogel materials have been synthesized by Click chemistry and shown to result in well-defined networks having significantly improved mechanical properties; the selectivity of the azide/acetylene coupling reaction also allows for the incorporation of various additives and functional groups leading to chemical tailoring of the hydrogels.


Lab on a Chip | 2011

Beyond PDMS: off-stoichiometry thiol–ene (OSTE) based soft lithography for rapid prototyping of microfluidic devices

Carl Fredrik Carlborg; Tommy Haraldsson; Kim Öberg; Michael Malkoch; Wouter van der Wijngaart

In this article we introduce a novel polymer platform based on off-stoichiometry thiol-enes (OSTEs), aiming to bridge the gap between research prototyping and commercial production of microfluidic devices. The polymers are based on the versatile UV-curable thiol-ene chemistry but takes advantage of off-stoichiometry ratios to enable important features for a prototyping system, such as one-step surface modifications, tuneable mechanical properties and leakage free sealing through direct UV-bonding. The platform exhibits many similarities with PDMS, such as rapid prototyping and uncomplicated processing but can at the same time mirror the mechanical and chemical properties of both PDMS as well as commercial grade thermoplastics. The OSTE-prepolymer can be cast using standard SU-8 on silicon masters and a table-top UV-lamp, the surface modifications are precisely grafted using a stencil mask and the bonding requires only a single UV-exposure. To illustrate the potential of the material we demonstrate key concepts important in microfluidic chip fabrication such as patterned surface modifications for hydrophobic stops, pneumatic valves using UV-lamination of stiff and rubbery materials as well as micromachining of chip-to-world connectors in the OSTE-materials.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2012

Simplifying the synthesis of dendrimers: accelerated approaches

Marie V. Walter; Michael Malkoch

Dendrimers are highly branched and monodisperse macromolecules that display an exact and large number of functional groups distributed with unprecedented control on the dendritic framework. Based on their globular structure, compared to linear polymers of the same molecular weight, dendrimers are foreseen to deliver extraordinary features for applications in areas such as cancer therapy, biosensors for diagnostics and light harvesting scaffolds. Of the large number of reports on dendrimer synthesis only a few have reached commercial availability. This limitation can be traced back to challenges in the synthetic paths including a large number of reaction steps required to obtain dendritic structures with desired features. Along with an increased number of reaction steps come not only increased waste of chemical and valuable starting materials but also an increased probability to introduce structural defects in the dendritic framework. This tutorial review briefly covers traditional growth approaches to dendrimers and mainly highlights accelerated approaches to dendrimers. A special focus capitalizes on the impact of the click chemistry concept on dendrimer synthesis and the promise it has to successfully accomplish highly sophisticated dendrimers, both traditional as well as heterofunctional, in a minimum number of chemical steps. It is clear that accelerated synthetic approaches are of greatest importance as these will encourage the scientific community to synthesize and access dendrimers for specific applications. The final goal of accelerated synthesis is to deliver economically justified dendritic materials for future applications without compromising the environmental perspective.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Bifunctional Dendrimers: From Robust Synthesis and Accelerated One‐Pot Postfunctionalization Strategy to Potential Applications

Per Antoni; Yvonne Hed; Axel Nordberg; Daniel Nyström; Hans von Holst; Anders Hult; Michael Malkoch

A fourth wheel: Two sets of bifunctional AB(2)C dendrimers having internal acetylene/azides and external hydroxy groups were constructed utilizing benign synthetic protocols. An in situ postfunctionalization strategy was successfully carried out to illustrate the chemoselective nature of these dendrimers. The dendrimers were also transformed into dendritic nanoparticles or utilized as dendritic crosslinkers for the fabrication hydrogels.


Biomaterials | 2012

Stability and biocompatibility of a library of polyester dendrimers in comparison to polyamidoamine dendrimers

Neus Feliu; Marie V. Walter; Maria I. Montañez; Andrea Kunzmann; Anders Hult; Andreas M. Nyström; Michael Malkoch; Bengt Fadeel

Dendrimers can be designed for several biomedical applications due to their well-defined structure, functionality and dimensions. The present study focused on the in vitro biocompatibility evaluation of a library of aliphatic polyester dendrimers based on 2,2-bis(methylol)propionic acid (bis-MPA) with an overall diameter of 0.5-2 nm. In addition, dendrimers with two different chemical surfaces (neutral with hydroxyl end group and anionic with carboxylic end group) and dendrons corresponding to the structural fragments of the dendrimers were evaluated. Commercial polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM) with cationic (amine) or neutral (hydroxyl) end group were also included for comparison. Cell viability studies were conducted in human cervical cancer (HeLa) and acute monocytic leukemia cells (THP.1) differentiated into macrophage-like cells as well as in primary human monocyte-derived macrophages. Excellent biocompatibility was observed for the entire hydroxyl functional bis-MPA dendrimer library, whereas the cationic, but not the neutral PAMAM exerted dose-dependent cytotoxicity in cell lines and primary macrophages. Studies to evaluate material stability as a function of pH, temperature, and time, demonstrated that the stability of the 4th generation hydroxyl functional bis-MPA dendrimer increased at acidic pH. Taken together, bis-MPA dendrimers are degradable and non-cytotoxic to human cell lines and primary cells.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2013

Dendritic architectures based on bis-MPA : functional polymeric scaffolds for application-driven research

Anna Carlmark; Eva Malmström; Michael Malkoch

Dendritic polymers are highly branched, globular architectures with multiple representations of functional groups. These nanoscale organic frameworks continue to fascinate researchers worldwide and are today under intensive investigation in application-driven research. A large number of potential application areas have been suggested for dendritic polymers, including theranostics, biosensors, optics, adhesives and coatings. The transition from potential to real applications is strongly dictated by their commercial accessibility, scaffolding ability as well as biocompatibility. A dendritic family that fulfills these requirements is based on the 2,2-bismethylolpropionic acid (bis-MPA) monomer. This critical review is the first of its kind to cover most of the research activities generated on aliphatic polyester dendritic architectures based on bis-MPA. It is apparent that these scaffolds will continue to be in the forefront of cutting-edge research as their structural variations are endless including dendrons, dendrimers, hyperbranched polymers, dendritic-linear hybrids and their hybridization with inorganic surfaces.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2010

Poly(ethylene glycol)-Based Thiol-ene Hydrogel Coatings−Curing Chemistry, Aqueous Stability, and Potential Marine Antifouling Applications

Pontus Lundberg; Anouk Bruin; Job W. Klijnstra; Andreas M. Nyström; Mats Johansson; Michael Malkoch; Anders Hult

Photocured thiol-ene hydrogel coatings based on poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) were investigated for marine antifouling purposes. By varying the PEG length, vinylic end-group, and thiol cross-linker, a library of hydrogel coatings with different structural composition was efficiently accomplished, with or without ester linkages. The thiol-methacrylate and thiol-allyl systems were evaluated with respect to curing, degradation, as well as antifouling properties. Methacrylate-based systems exhibited homopolymerization, whereas allyl-based systems reacted more selectively through thiol-ene couplings reaction. The ester-free hydrogels elucidated higher hydrolytic stability whereas longer PEG chains accelerated the degradation process. The antifouling properties were evaluated by protein adsorption with Bovine serum albumin (BSA) and bioassays with the marine bacteria, Cobetia marina, and the marine diatom, Amphora coffeaeformis; in all tests, longer PEG lengths improved the antifouling properties.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Bifunctional Dendronized Cellulose Surfaces as Biosensors

Maria I. Montañez; Yvonne Hed; Simon Utsel; Jarmo Ropponen; Eva Malmström; Lars Wågberg; Anders Hult; Michael Malkoch

Well-defined dendronized cellulose substrates displaying multiple representations of dual-functionality were constructed by taking advantage of the efficiency of the click reaction combined with traditional anhydride chemistry. First, activated cellulose surfaces were decorated with several generations of dendrons, and their peripheral reactive groups were subsequently reacted with a trifunctional orthogonal monomer. The generated substrate tool box was successfully explored by accurately tuning the surface function using a versatile orthogonal dual postfunctionalization approach. In general, the reactions were monitored by using a click-dye reagent or a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) technique, and the resulting surfaces were well-characterized using XPS, FT-IR, and contact angle measurements. Utilizing this approach two different surfaces have been obtained; that is, triethylenglycol oligomers and amoxicillin molecules were efficiently introduced to the dendritic surface. As a second example, mannose-decorated hydroxyl functional surfaces illustrated their potential as biosensors by multivalent detection of lectin protein at concentration as low as 5 nM.


Polymer Chemistry | 2011

Linear dendritic polymeric amphiphiles with intrinsic biocompatibility: synthesis and characterization to fabrication of micelles and honeycomb membranes

Pontus Lundberg; Marie V. Walter; Maria I. Montañez; Daniel Hult; Anders Hult; Andreas M. Nyström; Michael Malkoch

Linear dendritic hybrid materials enable a range of architectural variations which offers novel possibilities in the tailoring of polymeric materials. In this study dendrons based on the 2,2-bis(methylol)propionic acid (bis-MPA) building block, bearing click chemistry moieties in the core and peripheral hydroxyl functionalities, have been used as macroinitiators for ring opening polymerization of e-caprolactone. A library of star branched polymers with poly(e-caprolactone) chains was initially constructed using dendrons up to 4th generation. In a second step, the popular CuAAC or thiol–ene click reaction was efficiently used to attach poly(ethylene glycol) chains of different lengths to the core. Potential applications of the resulted amphiphilic linear dendritic hybrids were investigated. Both self-assembled micelles loaded with doxorubicin anticancer drug and ordered honeycomb membranes with enhanced surface area were successfully fabricated and characterized.


Soft Matter | 2013

pH-triggered self-assembly of biocompatible histamine-functionalized triblock copolymers

Pontus Lundberg; Nathaniel A. Lynd; Yuning Zhang; Xianghui Zeng; Daniel V. Krogstad; Tim Paffen; Michael Malkoch; Andreas M. Nyström; Craig J. Hawker

Histamine functionalized poly(allyl glycidyl ether)-b-poly(ethylene glycol)-b-poly(allyl glycidyl ether) (PAGE-PEO-PAGE) triblock copolymers represent a new class of physically cross-linked, pH-responsive hydrogels with significant potential for biomedical applications. These telechelic triblock copolymers exhibited abrupt and reversible hydrogelation above pH 7.0 due to a hudrophilic/hydrophobic transition of the histamine units to form a network of hydrophobic domains bridged by a hydrophilic PEO matrix. These hydrophobic domains displayed improved ordering upon increasing pH and self-assembled into a body centered cubic lattice at pH 8.0, while at lower concentrations formed well-defined micelles. Significantly, all materials were found to be non-toxic when evaluated on three different cell lines and suggests a range of medical and biomedical applications.

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Anders Hult

Royal Institute of Technology

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Oliver C. J. Andrén

Royal Institute of Technology

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Eva Malmström

Royal Institute of Technology

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Per Antoni

Royal Institute of Technology

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Pontus Lundberg

Royal Institute of Technology

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Marie V. Walter

Royal Institute of Technology

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Yvonne Hed

Royal Institute of Technology

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Maria I. Montañez

Royal Institute of Technology

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