Publications by authors named "Amalie Solberg"

Article Synopsis
  • Alginates are marine polysaccharides that can bind calcium ions and form hydrogels, making them useful in the biomedical field, though their production as nanogels is difficult.
  • The study introduces a self-assembly method to create stable alginate-based nanogels by combining guluronate blocks from alginates with dextran chains, resulting in micellar structures in the presence of divalent ions.
  • Using techniques like dynamic light scattering and small-angle neutron scattering, researchers found that these micelles have a consistent size of about 8 nm and can exchange ions, demonstrating dynamic behavior even in the presence of agents that can disassemble them.
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In this paper, the potential of esterified Kraft lignin as a novel oil-soluble surfactant was examined. The lignin was chemically modified by esterification with lauric or stearic acid, making it soluble in solvents such as toluene or -decane. Adsorption at the oil-water interface was then studied by the Du Noüy ring-method.

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New bone repair materials are needed for treatment of trauma- and disease-related skeletal defects as they still represent a major challenge in clinical practice. Additionally, new strategies are required to combat orthopedic device-related infections (ODRI), given the rising incidence of total joint replacement and fracture fixation surgeries in increasingly elderly populations. Recently, the convergence of additive manufacturing (AM) and bone tissue engineering (BTE) has facilitated the development of bone healthcare to achieve personalized three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds.

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Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women, and even though treatments are available, efficiency varies with the patients. In vitro 2D models are commonly used to develop new treatments. However, 2D models overestimate drug efficiency, which increases the failure rate in later phase III clinical trials.

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To commercialize a biomedical product as a medical device, reproducibility of production and time-stability are important parameters. Studies of reproducibility are lacking in the literature. Additionally, chemical pre-treatments of wood fibres to produce highly fibrillated cellulose nanofibrils (CNF) seem to be demanding in terms of production efficiency, being a bottleneck for industrial upscaling.

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Engineered block polysaccharides is a relatively new class of biomacromolecules consisting of chemical assembly of separate block structures at the chain termini. In contrast to conventional, laterally substituted polysaccharide derivatives, the block arrangement allows for much higher preservation of inherent chain properties such as biodegradability and stimuli-responsive self-assembly, while at the same time inducing new macromolecular properties. Abundant, carbon neutral, and even recalcitrant biomass is an excellent source of blocks, opening for numerous new uses of biomass for a wide range of novel biomaterials.

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Reducing end activation of poly- and oligosaccharides by bifunctional dioxyamines and dihydrazides enables aniline-free and cyanoborohydride-free conjugation to aldehyde-containing molecules, particles and surfaces without compromising the chain structure. Chitosans are due to their polycationic character, biodegradability, and bioactivity important candidates for conjugation. Here, we present a kinetic and structural study of the conjugation of a dioxyamine and a dihydrazide to enzymatically produced chitooligosaccharides ranging from N,N'-diacetylchitobiose to a decamer, all having N-acetyl d-glucosamine at the reducing end.

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Alginate is a linear polysaccharide from brown algae consisting of 1,4-linked β-d-mannuronic acid (M) and α-l-guluronic acid (G) arranged in M, G, and mixed MG blocks. Alginate was assumed to be indigestible in humans, but bacteria isolated from fecal samples can utilize alginate. Moreover, genomes of some human gut microbiome-associated bacteria encode putative alginate-degrading enzymes.

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