Pawaret Leowanawat
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Pawaret Leowanawat.
Science | 2010
Virgil Percec; Daniela A. Wilson; Pawaret Leowanawat; Christopher J. Wilson; Andrew D. Hughes; Mark S. Kaucher; Daniel A. Hammer; Dalia H. Levine; Anthony J. Kim; Frank S. Bates; Kevin P. Davis; Timothy P. Lodge; Michael L. Klein; Russell DeVane; Emad Aqad; Brad M. Rosen; Andreea O. Argintaru; Monika J. Sienkowska; Kari Rissanen; Sami Nummelin; Jarmo Ropponen
Janus Drug Delivery Vehicle Efficient drug delivery vehicles need to be produced in a limited size range and with uniform size distribution. The self-assembly of traditional small-molecule and polymeric amphiphiles has led to the production of micelles, liposomes, polymeric micelles, and polymersomes for use in drug delivery applications. Now, Percec et al. (p. 1009) describe the self-assembly of Janus-type (i.e., two-headed) dendrimers to produce monodisperse supramolecular constructs, termed “dendrimersomes,” and other complex architectures. The structures, which showed long-term stability as well as very narrow size distributions, were easily produced by the injection of an ethanolic solution of the dendrimer into water. The dendrimersomes could be loaded with the anticancer drug doxorubicin and exhibited controlled drug release with changing pH. Amphiphilic, spherically shaped polymers self-assemble into larger hollow complexes that could be used for drug delivery. Self-assembled nanostructures obtained from natural and synthetic amphiphiles serve as mimics of biological membranes and enable the delivery of drugs, proteins, genes, and imaging agents. Yet the precise molecular arrangements demanded by these functions are difficult to achieve. Libraries of amphiphilic Janus dendrimers, prepared by facile coupling of tailored hydrophilic and hydrophobic branched segments, have been screened by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, revealing a rich palette of morphologies in water, including vesicles, denoted dendrimersomes, cubosomes, disks, tubular vesicles, and helical ribbons. Dendrimersomes marry the stability and mechanical strength obtainable from polymersomes with the biological function of stabilized phospholipid liposomes, plus superior uniformity of size, ease of formation, and chemical functionalization. This modular synthesis strategy provides access to systematic tuning of molecular structure and of self-assembled architecture.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Virgil Percec; Pawaret Leowanawat; Hao Jan Sun; Oleg V. Kulikov; Christopher D. Nusbaum; Tam M. Tran; Annabelle Bertin; Daniela A. Wilson; Mihai Peterca; Shaodong Zhang; Neha P. Kamat; Kevin B. Vargo; Diana Moock; Eric D. Johnston; Daniel A. Hammer; Darrin J. Pochan; Yingchao Chen; Yoann M. Chabre; Tze Chieh Shiao; Milan Bergeron-Brlek; Sabine André; René Roy; Hans J. Gabius; Paul A. Heiney
The modular synthesis of 7 libraries containing 51 self-assembling amphiphilic Janus dendrimers with the monosaccharides D-mannose and D-galactose and the disaccharide D-lactose in their hydrophilic part is reported. These unprecedented sugar-containing dendrimers are named amphiphilic Janus glycodendrimers. Their self-assembly by simple injection of THF or ethanol solution into water or buffer and by hydration was analyzed by a combination of methods including dynamic light scattering, confocal microscopy, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, Fourier transform analysis, and micropipet-aspiration experiments to assess mechanical properties. These libraries revealed a diversity of hard and soft assemblies, including unilamellar spherical, polygonal, and tubular vesicles denoted glycodendrimersomes, aggregates of Janus glycodendrimers and rodlike micelles named glycodendrimer aggregates and glycodendrimermicelles, cubosomes denoted glycodendrimercubosomes, and solid lamellae. These assemblies are stable over time in water and in buffer, exhibit narrow molecular-weight distribution, and display dimensions that are programmable by the concentration of the solution from which they are injected. This study elaborated the molecular principles leading to single-type soft glycodendrimersomes assembled from amphiphilic Janus glycodendrimers. The multivalency of glycodendrimersomes with different sizes and their ligand bioactivity were demonstrated by selective agglutination with a diversity of sugar-binding protein receptors such as the plant lectins concanavalin A and the highly toxic mistletoe Viscum album L. agglutinin, the bacterial lectin PA-IL from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and, of special biomedical relevance, human adhesion/growth-regulatory galectin-3 and galectin-4. These results demonstrated the candidacy of glycodendrimersomes as new mimics of biological membranes with programmable glycan ligand presentations, as supramolecular lectin blockers, vaccines, and targeted delivery devices.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Mihai Peterca; Virgil Percec; Pawaret Leowanawat; Annabelle Bertin
Dendrimersomes are stable, monodisperse unilamellar vesicles self-assembled in water from amphiphilic Janus dendrimers. Their size, stability, and membrane structure are determined by the chemical structure of Janus dendrimer and the method of self-assembly. Comparative analysis of the periodic arrays in bulk and dendrimersomes assembled by ethanol injection in water of 11 libraries containing 108 Janus dendrimers is reported. Analysis in bulk and in water was performed by differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, dynamic light scattering, and cryo-TEM. An inverse proportionality between size, stability, mechanical properties of dendrimersomes, and thickness of their membrane was discovered. This dependence was explained by the tendency of alkyl chains forming the hydrophobic part of the dendrimersome to produce the same local packing density regardless of the branching pattern from the hydrophobic part of the dendrimer. For the same hydrophobic alkyl chain length, the largest, toughest, and most stable dendrimersomes are those with the thinnest membrane that results from the interdigitation of the alkyl groups of the Janus dendrimer. A simplified spherical-shell model of the dendrimersome was used to demonstrate the direct correlation between the concentration of Janus dendrimer in water, c, and the size of self-assembled dendrimersome. This concentration-size dependence demonstrates that the mass of the vesicle membrane is proportional with c. A methodology to predict the size of the dendrimersome based on this correlation was developed. This methodology explains the inverse proportionality between the size of dendrimersome and its membrane thickness, and provides a good agreement between the experimental and predicted size of dendrimersome.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Virgil Percec; Mohammad R. Imam; Mihai Peterca; Pawaret Leowanawat
The synthesis and structural analysis of polymers dendronized with self-assembling Janus dendrimers containing one fluorinated and one hydrogenated dendrons are reported. Janus dendrimers were attached to the polymer backbone both from the hydrogenated and from the fluorinated parts of the Janus dendrimer. Structural analysis of these dendronized polymers and of their precursors by a combination of differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction experiments on powder and oriented fibers, and electron density maps have demonstrated that in both cases the dendronized polymer consists of a vesicular columnar structure containing fluorinated alkyl groups on its periphery. This vesicular columnar structure is generated by a mechanism that involves the intramolecular assembly of the Janus dendrimers into tapered dendrons followed by the intramolecular self-assembly of the resulting dendronized polymer in a vesicular column. By contrast with conventional polymers dendronized with self-assembling tapered dendrons this new class of dendronized polymers acts as thermal actuators that decrease the length of the supramolecular column when the temperature is increased and therefore, are called reverse thermal actuators. A mechanism for this reversed process was proposed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Mihai Peterca; Virgil Percec; Mohammad R. Imam; Pawaret Leowanawat; Kentaro Morimitsu; Paul A. Heiney
The molecular structure of helical supramolecular dendrimers generated from self-assembling dendrons and dendrimers and from self-organizable dendronized polymers was elucidated for the first time by the simulation of the X-ray diffraction patterns of their oriented fibers. These simulations were based on helical diffraction theory applied to simplified atomic helical models, followed by Cerius2 calculations based on their complete molecular helical structures. Hundreds of samples were screened until a library containing 14 supramolecular dendrimers and dendronized polymers provided a sufficient number of helical features in the X-ray diffraction pattern of their oriented fibers. This combination of techniques provided examples of single-9(2) and -11(3) helices, triple-6(1), -8(1), -9(1), and -12(1) helices, and an octa-32(1) helix that were assembled from crownlike dendrimers, hollow and nonhollow supramolecular crownlike dendrimers, hollow and nonhollow supramolecular disklike dendrimers, and hollow and nonhollow supramolecular and macromolecular helicene-like architectures. The method elaborated here for the determination of the molecular helix structure was transplanted from the field of structural biology and will be applicable to other classes of synthetic helical assemblies. The determination of the molecular structure of helical supramolecular assemblies is expected to provide an additional level of precision in the design of helical functional assemblies resembling those from biological systems.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Virgil Percec; Mihai Peterca; Timur Tadjiev; Xiangbing Zeng; Goran Ungar; Pawaret Leowanawat; Emad Aqad; Mohammad R. Imam; Brad M. Rosen; Ümit Akbey; Robert Graf; Sivakumar Sekharan; Daniel Sebastiani; Hans Wolfgang Spiess; Paul A. Heiney; Steven D. Hudson
The synthesis of perylene 3,4:9,10-tetracarboxylic acid bisimides (PBIs) dendronized with first-generation dendrons containing 0 to 4 methylenic units (m) between the imide group and the dendron, (3,4,5)12G1-m-PBI, is reported. Structural analysis of their self-organized arrays by DSC, X-ray diffraction, molecular modeling, and solid-state (1)H NMR was carried out on oriented samples with heating and cooling rates of 20 to 0.2 °C/min. At high temperature, (3,4,5)12G1-m-PBI self-assemble into 2D-hexagonal columnar phases with intracolumnar order. At low temperature, they form orthorhombic (m = 0, 2, 3, 4) and monoclinic (m = 1) columnar arrays with 3D periodicity. The orthorhombic phase has symmetry close to hexagonal. For m = 0, 2, 3, 4 ,they consist of tetramers as basic units. The tetramers contain a pair of two molecules arranged side by side and another pair in the next stratum of the column, turned upside-down and rotated around the column axis at different angles for different m. In contrast, for m = 1, there is only one molecule in each stratum, with a four-strata 2(1) helical repeat. All molecules face up in one column, and down in the second column, of the monoclinic cell. This allows close and extended π-stacking, unlike in the disruptive up-down alteration from the case of m = 0, 2, 3, 4. Most of the 3D structures were observed only by cooling at rates of 1 °C/min or less. This complex helical self-assembly is representative for other classes of dendronized PBIs investigated for organic electronics and solar cells.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012
Pawaret Leowanawat; Na Zhang; Virgil Percec
The efficiency of mesylates, sulfamates, esters, carbonates, carbamates, and methyl ethers as C-O-based electrophiles attached to the 1- or 2-position of naphthalene and to activated and nonactivated phenyl substrates was compared for the first time in Ni-catalyzed cross-coupling with phenyl neopentylglycolboronates containing electron-rich and electron-deficient substituents in their para-position. These experiments were performed in the presence of four different Ni(II)- and Ni(0)-based catalysts. Ni(II)-based catalysts mediate the cross-coupling of most 2-naphthyl C-O electrophiles with both arylboronic acids and with neopentylglycolboronates when K(3)PO(4) is used as base. The same catalysts are not efficient when CsF is used as base. However, Ni(0)-based catalysts exhibit selective efficiency, and when reactive, their efficiency is higher than that of Ni(II)-based catalysts in the presence of both K(3)PO(4) and CsF. These results provide both reaction conditions for the cross-coupling, and for the elaboration of orthogonal cross-coupling methodologies of various C-O based electrophiles with aryl neopentylglycolboronates. With the exception of mesylates and sulfamates the efficiency of all other 2-naphthyl C-O electrophiles was lower in cross-coupling with aryl neopentylglycolboronates than with arylboronic acids.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011
Pawaret Leowanawat; Na Zhang; Ana-Maria Resmerita; Brad M. Rosen; Virgil Percec
Reaction conditions for the Ni(COD)(2)/PCy(3) catalyzed cross-coupling of aryl neopentylglycolboronates with aryl mesylates were developed. By using optimized reaction conditions, Ni(COD)(2)/PCy(3) was shown to be a versatile catalyst for the cross-coupling of a diversity of aryl neopentylglycolboronates with aryl and heteroaryl mesylates and sulfamates containing both electron-donating and electron-withdrawing substituents in their para, ortho, and meta positions in THF at room temperature. This Ni-catalyzed cross-coupling of aryl neopentylglycolboronates is also effective for the synthesis of heterobiaryls and biaryls containing electrophilic functionalities sensitive to organolithium and organomagnesium derivatives. In combination with the recently developed Ni-catalyzed neopentylglycolborylation, all Ni-catalyzed routes to functional biaryls and heterobiaryls are now easily accessible.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Brad M. Rosen; Mihai Peterca; Kentaro Morimitsu; Andr es E. Dulcey; Pawaret Leowanawat; Ana-Maria Resmerita; Mohammad R. Imam; Virgil Percec
Many natural biomacromolecules are homochiral and are built from constituents possessing identical handedness. The construction of synthetic molecules, macromolecules, and supramolecular structures with tailored stereochemical sequences can detail the relationship between chirality and function and provide insight into the process that leads to the selection of handedness and amplification of chirality. Dendritic dipeptides, previously reported from our laboratory, self-assemble into helical porous columns and serve as fundamental mimics of natural porous helix-forming proteins and supramolecular polymers. Herein, the synthesis of all stereochemical permutations of a self-assembling dendritic dipeptide including homochiral, heterochiral, and differentially racemized variants is reported. A combination of CD/UV-vis spectroscopy in solution and in film, X-ray diffraction, and differential scanning calorimetry studies in solid state established the role of the stereochemistry of the dipeptide on the thermodynamics and mechanism of self-assembly. It was found that the highest degree of stereochemical purity, enantiopure homochiral dendritic dipeptides, exhibits the most thermodynamically favorable self-assembly process in solution corresponding to the greatest degree of helical order and intracolumnar crystallization in solid state. Reducing the stereochemical purity of the dendritic dipeptide through heterochirality or by partially or fully racemizing the dendritic dipeptide destructively interferes with the self-assembly process. All dendritic dipeptides were shown to coassemble into single columns regardless of their stereochemistry. Because these columns exhibit no deracemization, the thermodynamic advantage of enantiopurity and homochirality suggests a mechanism for stereochemical selection and chiral amplification.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Virgil Percec; Hao-Jan Sun; Pawaret Leowanawat; Mihai Peterca; Robert Graf; Hans Wolfgang Spiess; Xiangbing Zeng; Goran Ungar; Paul A. Heiney
The dendronized perylene 3,4:9,10-tetracarboxylic acid bisimide (PBI), (3,4,5)12G1-1-PBI, was reported by our laboratory to self-assemble into complex helical columns containing dimers of dendronized PBI with one molecule in each stratum, with different intra- and interdimer rotation angles but identical intra- and interdimer distance of 3.5 Å, exhibiting a four-strata 2(1) helical repeat. A thermodynamically controlled 2D columnar hexagonal phase with short-range intracolumnar order represents the thermodynamic product at high temperature, while a kinetically controlled monoclinic columnar array with 3D periodicity is the thermodynamic product at low temperature. With heating and cooling rates higher than 10 °C/min to 1 °C/min, at low temperature the 2D columnar periodic array is the kinetic product for this dendronized PBI. Here the synthesis and structural analysis of a library of (3,4,5)nG1-m-PBI with n = 12 to 6 and m = 1 are reported. A combination of differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction on powder and orientated fibers, including pattern simulation and electron density map reconstruction, and solid-state NMR, all as a function of temperature and heating and cooling rate, was employed for their structural analysis. It was discovered that at low temperature the as-prepared n = 12 to 10 exhibit a 3D layered array that transforms irreversibly into columnar periodicities during heating and cooling. Also the kinetically controlled 3D columnar phase of n = 12 becomes thermodynamically controlled for n = 10, 9, 8, 7, and 6. This unprecedented transformation is expected to facilitate the design of functions from dendronized PBI and other self-assembling building blocks.