Publications by authors named "Grethe Vestergaard Jensen"

Bacterial colonization is mediated by fimbriae, which are thin hair-like appendages dispersed from the bacterial surface. The aggregative adherence fimbriae from enteroaggregative E. coli are secreted through the outer membrane and consist of polymerized minor and major pilin subunits.

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Interactions between proteins and surfactants are both of fundamental interest and relevant for applications in food, cosmetics and detergency. The anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) denatures essentially all proteins. Denaturation typically involves a number of distinct steps where growing numbers of SDS molecules bind to the protein, as seen in multidisciplinary approaches combining several complementary techniques.

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In small-angle scattering theory and data modeling, it is generally assumed that each scattered ray - photon or neutron - is only scattered once on its path through the sample. This assumption greatly simplifies the interpretation of the data and is valid in many cases. However, it breaks down under conditions of high scattering power, increasing with sample concentration, scattering contrast, sample path length and ray wavelength.

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A novel and generally applicable method for determining structures of membrane proteins in solution via small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) is presented. Common detergents for solubilizing membrane proteins were synthesized in isotope-substituted versions for utilizing the intrinsic neutron scattering length difference between hydrogen and deuterium. Individual hydrogen/deuterium levels of the detergent head and tail groups were achieved such that the formed micelles became effectively invisible in heavy water (D O) when investigated by neutrons.

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Bariatric surgery is currently the most effective treatment of obesity, which has spurred an interest in developing pharmaceutical mimetics. It is thought that the marked body weight-lowering effects of bariatric surgery involve stimulated secretion of appetite-regulating gut hormones, including glucagon-like peptide 1. We here report that intestinal expression of secretin is markedly upregulated in a rat model of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, suggesting an additional role of secretin in the beneficial metabolic effects of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass.

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In recent years, aquaporin biomimetic membranes (ABMs) for water separation have gained considerable interest. Although the first ABMs are commercially available, there are still many challenges associated with further ABM development. Here, we discuss the interplay of the main components of ABMs: aquaporin proteins (AQPs), block copolymers for AQP reconstitution, and polymer-based supporting structures.

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The synthesis, characterization, and electrokinetic energy conversion performance have been investigated experimentally in a charged polymeric membrane based on a blend of nitrocellulose and sulfonated polystyrene. The membrane is characterized by a moderate ion exchange capacity and a relatively porous structure with average pore diameter of 11 nm. With electrokinetic energy conversion, pressure can be converted directly into electric energy and vice versa.

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Despite over a century of modern surfactant science, the kinetic pathways of morphological transitions in micellar systems are still not well understood. This is mainly as a result of the lack of sufficiently fast methods that can capture the structural changes of such transitions. Herein, a simple surfactant system consisting of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in aqueous NaCl solutions is investigated.

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Intermediate amyloidogenic states along the amyloid β peptide (Aβ) aggregation pathway have been shown to be linked to neurotoxicity. To shed more light on the different structures that may arise during Aβ aggregation, we here investigate surfactant-induced Aβ aggregation. This process leads to co-aggregates featuring a β-structure motif that is characteristic for mature amyloid-like structures.

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Self-assembly of amphiphilic molecules into micelles occurs on very short times scales of typically some milliseconds, and the structural evolution is therefore very challenging to observe experimentally. While rate constants of surfactant micelle kinetics have been accessed by spectroscopic techniques for decades, so far no experiments providing detailed information on the structural evolution of surfactant micelles during their formation process have been reported. In this work we show that by applying synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) in combination with the stopped-flow mixing technique, the entire micelle formation process from single surfactants to equilibrium micelles can be followed in situ.

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We have in this study investigated the composition, structure and spectroscopical properties of multilamellar vesicles composed of a phospholipid, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), and up to 10mol% of triolein (TO), a triglyceride. We found in agreement with previous results that the mixtures with 10mol% TO spontaneously separate into two distinct phases, heavy (HF) and light (LF), with different densities and found this also to be the case for 2 and 5mol% TO. The compositions of the two phases were investigated by quantitative lipid mass spectrometric analysis, and with this method we found that TO had a solubility maximum of about 4mol% in the HF, whereas it was markedly up-concentrated in the LF.

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Alkaline sodium silicate solutions with SiO2:Na2O molar ratios in the range 4-10 are known to be colloidally unstable manifested in phase separation or gelation. The mechanistic understanding of this instability is generally poor. To improve this situation the microscopic structure of a series of solutions with ratios in the range 3.

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We report a facile method of generating ultradense poly(l-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) surface by using high temperature alone, which in turn provides dramatic improvement in resisting nonspecific bioadsorption. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) revealed that the surface graft density increased ~4 times higher on the surface prepared at 80 °C compared to 20 °C. The studies from small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and the effect of varying ionic strength during/post assemblies at 20 and 80 °C indicated that the "cloud point grafting effect" is not the cause for obtaining high density grafting.

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