Protein photocatalysts provide a modular platform to access new reaction pathways and affect product outcomes, but their use in polymer synthesis is limited because co-catalysts and/or co-reductants are required to complete catalytic cycles. Herein, we report using zinc myoglobin (ZnMb), an inherently photoactive protein, to mediate photoinduced electron/energy transfer (PET) reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerizations. Using ZnMb as the sole reagent for catalysis, photomediated polymerizations of N,N-dimethylacrylamide in PBS were achieved with predictable molecular weights, dispersity values approaching 1.1, and high chain-end fidelity. We found that initial apparent rate constants of polymerization increased from 4.6×10-5 s-1 for zinc mesoporpyhrin IX (ZnMIX) to 6.5×10-5 s-1 when ZnMIX was incorporated into myoglobin to yield ZnMb, indicating that the protein binding site enhanced catalytic activity. Chain extension reactions comparing ZnMb-mediated RAFT polymerizations to thermally-initiated RAFT polymerizations showed minimal differences in block copolymer molecular weights and dispersities. This work enables studies to elucidate how protein modifications (e.g., secondary structure folding, site-directed mutagenesis, directed evolution) can be used to modulate polymerization outcomes (e.g., selective monomer additions towards sequence control, tacticity control, molar mass distributions).
Keywords: Biocatalysis; PET-RAFT; Photocatalysis; Polymerization; Reversible-deactivation radical polymerization.
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