Direct Correlation between the Secondary Structure of an Amphiphilic Polymer and Its Prominent Antiviral Activity.
Atish NagKumarjeet BanerjeeRanajit BarmanJoy KarDebi P SarkarSiddhartha Sankar JanaSuhrit GhoshPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
An amphiphilic segmented polyurethane (F-PU-S), with pendant sulfate groups and a flexible hydrocarbon backbone, exhibits intrachain H-bonding-reinforced folding and hierarchical assembly, producing an anionic polymersome with efficient display of sulfate groups at the surface. It shows an excellent antiviral activity against Sendai virus (SV) by inhibiting its entry to the cells. Mechanistic investigation suggests fusion of the SV and the polymersome to produce larger particles in which neither the folded structure of the polymer nor the fusogenic property of the SV exists anymore. In sharp contrast, a structurally similar polymer R-PU-S, in which the chain folding pathway is blocked by replacing the flexible C6 chain with a rigid cyclohexane chain in the backbone, cannot form a similar polymersome structure and hence does not exhibit any antiviral activity. On the other hand, the third polymer (F-PU-C), which is similar to F-PU-S except for the pendant anionic groups (carboxylate instead of sulfate), also fails to exhibit any antiviral activity against SV, confirming the essential role of the chain folding as well as the pendant sulfate groups for the fusion-induced antiviral activity of F-PU-S, which provides an important structural guideline for developing new antiviral polymers.