Web Release Date: June 1,
Dendrimers as a Scaffold for Nitric Oxide Release
Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
Received February 13, 2006

Abstract:
The preparation and characterization of nitric oxide (NO)-releasing dendrimer conjugates are
reported. Generation 3 and 5 polypropylenimine dendrimers (DAB-Am-16 and DAB-Am-64) were modified
at the exterior to impart different amine functionalities. The ability to store NO on a dendritic scaffold using
N-diazeniumdiolate NO donors was examined via the reaction of primary amine, secondary amine, and
amide functionalities with high pressures of NO (5 atm). The secondary amine dendrimer conjugates
exhibited a high storage capacity for NO (up to 5.6
mol NO/mg), greatly increasing the "payload" of released
NO over existing macromolecular NO donors. The mechanism of diazeniumdiolate decomposition was
proton initiated, generating NO spontaneously under physiological conditions (pH 7.4, 37
C). The NO
release durations (>16 h) observed for the secondary amine dendrimers were significantly longer compared
to small molecule alkyl secondary amine diazeniumdiolates, thus illustrating a dendritic effect on NO release
kinetics. The multivalent exterior of dendrimers allows for the future combination of NO donors and other
functionalities on a single molecular scaffold, enabling diverse utility as NO storage/delivery systems.
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