Carbosilane dendrimers are hyperbranched lipophilic scaffolds widely explored in biomedical applications. This work exploits, for the first time, the ability of these scaffolds to generate functional hydrogels with amphiphilic properties. The monodispersity and multivalency enable a precise synthetic control of the network, while the lipophilicity improves the compatibility with poorly soluble cargo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers are exploited as drug carriers in various biomedical research fields, especially cancer therapy. The present study analyzes the interactions occurring between differently functionalized PAMAM dendrimers, namely, amine, acetamide, and 3-methoxy-carbonyl-5-pyrrolidonyl ("pyrrolidone"), and model membranes, namely, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), sodium hexadecylsulfate (SHS) micelles, and egg-lecithin liposomes. For this purpose, the dendrimers were spin-labeled with the 3-carbamoyl-PROXYL radical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe immobilization of homogeneous catalysts onto supports to improve recyclability while maintaining catalytic efficiency is often a trial-and-error process limited by poor control of the local catalyst environment and few strategies to append catalysts to support materials. Here, we introduce a modular heterogenous catalysis platform that addresses these challenges. Our approach leverages the well-defined interiors of self-assembled PdL metal-organic cages/polyhedra (MOCs): simple mixing of a catalyst-ligand of choice with a polymeric ligand, spacer ligands, and a Pd salt induces self-assembly of PdL-cross-linked polymer gels featuring endohedrally catalyst-functionalized junctions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLipid structural diversity strongly affects biomembrane chemico-physical and structural properties in addition to membrane-associated events. At high concentrations, cholesterol increases membrane order and rigidity, while polyunsaturated lipids are reported to increase disorder and flexibility. How these different tendencies balance in composite bilayers is still controversial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnti-(ds)-DNA antibodies are the serological hallmark of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). They assemble in the bloodstream with (ds)-DNA, forming immunocomplexes, which spread all over the body causing, among the other symptoms, lupic glomerulonephritis. Pathological manifestations of the disease may be reduced by destabilizing or inhibiting the formation of the immunocomplexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Chem
February 2022
The activity and interacting ability of a polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimer modified with 4--methylpiperazine-1,8-naphthalimide units (termed D) and complexed by Cu(ii) ions, towards healthy and cancer cells were studied. Comparative electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of the Cu(ii)-D complex are presented: coordination mode, chemical structure, flexibility and stability of these complexes, in the absence and presence of myeloid cancer cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). The interactions of Cu(ii) ions in the biological media at different equilibrium times were studied, highlighting different stability and interacting conditions with the cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIminopyridine-decorated carbosilane metallodendrimers have recently emerged as a promising strategy in the treatment of cancer diseases. Their unique features such as the nanometric size, the multivalent nature and the structural perfection offer an extraordinary platform to explore structure-to-property relationships. Herein, we showcase the outstanding impact on the antitumor activity of a parameter not explored before: the iminopyridine substituents in meta position.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyunsaturated omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is found in very high concentrations in a few peculiar tissues, suggesting that it must have a specialized role. DHA was proposed to affect the function of the cell membrane and related proteins through an indirect mechanism of action, based on the DHA-phospholipid effects on the lipid bilayer structure. In this respect, most studies have focused on its influence on lipid-rafts, somehow neglecting the analysis of effects on liquid disordered phases that constitute most of the cell membranes, by reporting in these cases only a general fluidifying effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCopper (Cu)(II) ions, mainly an excess amount, play a negative role in the course of several diseases, like cancers, neurodegenerative diseases, and the so-called Wilson disease. On the contrary, Cu(II) ions are also capable of improving anticancer drug efficiency. For this reason, it is of great interest to study the interacting ability of Cu(II)-nanodrug and Cu(II)-nanocarrier complexes with cell membranes for their potential use as nanotherapeutics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCopper(II) carbosilane metallodendrimers are promising nanosized anticancer metallodrugs. The precise control on their design enables an accurate structure-to-activity study. We hypothesized that different structural features, such as the dendrimer generation and metal counterion, modulate the interaction with tumor cells, and subsequently, the effectivity and selectivity of the therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChlorophyll derivatives were integrated in "all solid-state" dye sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) with a mesoporous TiO electrode and 2',2',7,7'-tetrakis[,-di(4-methoxyphenyl)amino]-9,9'-spirobifluorene as the hole-transport material. Despite modest power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) between 0.26% and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
September 2019
Dendrimers exhibit unique interactions with cell membranes, arising from their nanometric size and high surface area. To a great extent, these interactions define their biological activity and can be reported in situ by spin-labelling techniques. Schiff-base carbosilane ruthenium (II) metallodendrimers are promising antitumor agents with a mechanism of action yet to explore.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlastics are the most abundant marine debris globally dispersed in the oceans and its production is rising with documented negative impacts in marine ecosystems. However, the chemical-physical and biological interactions occurring between plastic and planktonic communities of different types of microorganisms are poorly understood. In these respects, it is of paramount importance to understand, on a molecular level on the surface, what happens to plastic fragments when dispersed in the ocean and directly interacting with phytoplankton assemblages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent cancer therapies present serious drawbacks including severe side-effects and development of drug resistance. Strategies based on nanosized metallodrugs combine the structural diversity and non-classical modes of action of metal complexes with the selectivity arising from the unique interaction of nanoparticles with biological membranes. A new family of water-soluble copper(ii) carbosilane metallodendrimers was synthesized and characterized as a nanotechnological alternative to current therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmaceutical applications of microemulsions (MEs) as drug delivery vehicles are recently gaining scientific and practical interests. Most MEs are able to solubilize bioactive molecules, but, at present, they cannot guarantee either controlled release of the drugs or significant advantage in the bioavailability of the bioactives. This study proposes to incorporate the modified ME structures, or nanodomains, into a natural polymeric film, to be used as a stable and capacious reservoir of drug-loaded nanodomains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroemulsions (MEs) have gained increasing interest as carriers of hydrophobic bioactives in the last decades. However, it is still difficult to control the uptake and the release of bioactives directly extracted from plants. In this study, modified ME nanodroplets (nano-sized self-assembled liquids, NSSLs) were employed as extraction medium of gossypol, a toxic component of cottonseed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiquid Electron Ionization (LEI), is an innovative liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) interface that converts liquid HPLC eluent to the gas-phase in a mass spectrometer equipped with an electron ionization (EI) source. LEI extends the electronic spectra libraries access to liquid chromatography, providing a powerful tool in the untargeted approacssh. Negligible matrix effects allow accurate quantitative information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitroxides occupy a privileged position among plausible metal-free magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents (CAs) due to their inherently low-toxicity profiles; nevertheless, their translational development has been hindered by a lack of appropriate contrast sensitivity. Nanostructured materials with high nitroxide densities, where each individual nitroxide within a macromolecular construct contributes to the image contrast, could address this limitation, but the synthesis of such materials remains challenging. Here, we report a modular and scalable synthetic approach to nitroxide-based brush-arm star polymer (BASP) organic radical CAs (ORCAs) with high nitroxide loadings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToll-like receptors (TLRs) are pattern recognition transmembrane proteins that play an important role in innate immunity. In particular, TLR7 plays a role in detecting nucleic acids derived from viruses and bacteria. The huge number of pathologies in which TLR7 is involved has led to an increasing interest in developing new compounds targeting this protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe silicon transport and use inside cells are key processes for understanding how diatoms metabolize this element in the silica biogenic cycle in the ocean. A spin-probe electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) study over time helped to investigate the interacting properties and the internalization mechanisms of silicic acid from different silicon sources into the cells. Diatom cells were grown in media containing biogenic amorphous substrates, such as diatomaceous earth and sponge spicules, and crystalline sodium metasilicate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers at different generations (from G2 to G6) were functionalized with pyridine (Py) groups at the external surface, and their complexation behavior with Cu(II) at increasing molar ratios between the ions and the Py groups was analyzed in the absence and presence of reducing agents and a spin trap. These Cu(II)-dendrimer complexes may be used as antitumor and antiamyloidogenesis drugs, similarly to other Cu(II)-dendrimer complexes, and as biocatalysts. Indeed, they have revealed to selectively catalyze molecular oxygen reduction to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloids Surf B Biointerfaces
January 2018
Human monocyte U937 cell line was used as a model to verify the toxicity of erionite and offretite asbestiform zeolite fibers. As a presumed non-toxic reference, a fibrous scolecite zeolite was also used. To analyze the process of fiber ingestion into cells and the cells-fibers interactions, a spin-probe electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analysis was performed supported by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and cell viability measurements as a function of the incubation time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Toxicol Environ Health A
June 2017
Different asbestiform zeolite fibers of the erionite (termed GF1 and MD8, demonstrated carcinogenic) and offretite (termed BV12, suspected carcinogenic) families were investigated by analyzing the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of selected surfactant spin probes and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images in the presence of model membranes-cetyltrimethylammonium (CTAB) micelles, egg-lecithin liposomes, and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) liposomes. This was undertaken to obtain information on interactions occurring at a molecular level between fibers and membranes which correlate with entrance of fibers into the membrane model or location of the fibers at the external or internal membrane interfaces. For CTAB micelles, all fibers were able to enter the micelles, but the hair-like structure and chemical surface characteristics of GF1 modified the micelle structure toward a bilayer-like organization, while MD8 and BV12, being shorter fibers and with a high density of surface interacting groups, partially destroyed the micelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDendrimer nanostructures are of eminent interest in biomedical applications because of their uniform and well-defined molecular size and shape, and their ability to cross cell membranes and reduce the risk of premature clearance from the human body. Dendrimers perform as gene and drug carriers and have also shown significant therapeutic properties for treating cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. A complex drug delivery system, based on a dendrimer solubilized in the aqueous core of a water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsion (ME) along with the drug may combine the advantages of both dendrimers and MEs to provide better control of drug release.
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