The atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of styrene and acrylates from silicon wafers modified with an initiator layer composed of 2-bromoisobutyrate fragments is described. In the presence of the proper ratio of activating and deactivating transition-metal species, controlled radical polymerizations of styrene were observed such that the thickness of the layer consisting of chains grown from the surface increased linearly with the molecular weight of chains polymerized in solution in identical, yet separate, experiments. The layer thickness increased linearly with reaction time for ATRP of styrene and methyl acrylate due to both the extremely low initiator concentration relative to monomer and the low monomer conversion. Further evidence for control was observed by the polymerization of blocks of either methyl or tert-butyl acrylate from the polystyrene layer. Modification of the hydrophilicity of the surface layer was achieved by hydrolysis of the poly(styrene-b-tert-butyl acrylate) to poly(styrene-b-acrylic acid) and confirmed by decrease in water contact angle from 86° to 18°. The mechanistic aspects of ATRP in the polymerization process were confirmed by the growth of very thick polystyrene films in the presence of a pure copper(I) complex. Since no deactivator was present, the metal complex served only to facilitate initiation by a redox process. Attempts to extend chain with methyl acrylate under controlled conditions were unsuccessful in those films. The simulation of polymerization of surface layers suggests broader molecular weight and chain end distributions, confirming XPS results on the progressive decrease of Br absorption intensity.
Nerve damage is the major morbidity of many surgeries, resulting in chronic pain, loss of function, or both. The sparing of nerves during surgical procedures is a vexing problem because surrounding tissue often obscures them. To date, systemically administered nerve-highlighting contrast agents that can be used for nerve-sparing image-guided surgery have not been reported. In the current study, physicochemical and optical properties of 4,4’-[(2-methoxy-1,4-phenylene)di-(1E)-2,1-ethenediyl]bis-benzenamine (BMB) and a newly synthesized, red-shifted derivative 4-[(1E)-2-[4-[(1E)-2-[4-aminophenyl]ethenyl]-3-methoxyphenyl]ethenyl]-benzonitrile (GE3082) were characterized in vitro and in vivo. Both agents crossed the blood-nerve barrier and blood-brain barrier, and rendered myelinated nerves fluorescent after a single systemic injection. Although both BMB and GE3082 also exhibited significant uptake in white adipose tissue, GE3082 underwent a hypsochromic shift in adipose tissue that provided a means to eliminate the unwanted signal using hyperspectral deconvolution. Dose and kinetic studies were performed in mice to determine the optimal dose and drug-imaging interval. Results were confirmed in rat and pig, with the latter used to demonstrate, for the first time, simultaneous fluorescence imaging of blood vessels and nerves during surgery using the FLARE™ (Fluorescence-Assisted Resection and Exploration) imaging system. These results lay the foundation for the development of ideal nerve-highlighting fluorophores for image-guided surgery.
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