Sub Cat. No. |
Molecular Weight |
Glycan Name |
Functional Group |
Inquiry |
X25-04-ZQ421-1 |
PEG 350 Da |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-2 |
PEG 550 Da |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-3 |
PEG 750 Da |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-4 |
PEG 1 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-5 |
PEG 2 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-6 |
PEG 3 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-7 |
PEG 4 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-8 |
PEG 5 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-9 |
PEG 10 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
X25-04-ZQ421-10 |
PEG 20 kDa |
Glucose |
PMMA |
Inquiry
|
Properties
Description
This versatile acrylic polymer conjugate consists of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), a biocompatible and mechanically robust polymer, covalently attached via a flexible polyethylene glycol (PEG) chain to glucose. This high-purity reagent provides a unique material for creating glucose-decorated microparticles or surfaces with tailored mechanical properties and potential for enhanced biocompatibility or specific interactions with glucose-binding proteins.
Source
Chemical synthesis
Solubility
PMMA-PEG-glucose is soluble in a wide range of organic solvents, such as DCM, DMF, and DMSO, and shows excellent solubility in water.
Identity
Confirmed by NMR.
Applications
PMMA-PEG-glucose can be incorporated into materials to study polymer blending with a glucose scaffold.