Publications by authors named "Nathan J Wittenberg"

Article Synopsis
  • Oxidized lipids, specifically KDdiA-PC and KOdiA-PC, are connected to serious health issues like cardiovascular diseases, including heart failure and stroke.
  • The study investigates how these oxidized phosphatidylcholines affect larger lipid bilayer membranes and how cholesterol interacts with them using advanced experimental techniques and simulations.
  • Findings indicate that these oxPCs lead to thinner bilayers with defects and change the bilayer's properties by altering lipid conformations, enhancing our understanding of lipid oxidation's role in heart disease and immune responses.
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There is an increasing demand within the pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries for biofriendly lipid-based active ingredient delivery systems. Micelles, liposomes, and lipid nanoparticles are currently the most used systems despite their limitations. Oleosomes, also known as lipid droplets, are promising alternatives to the existing strategies.

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Antibiotic resistance is a major challenge in modern medicine. The unique double membrane structure of Gram-negative bacteria limits the efficacy of many existing antibiotics and adds complexity to antibiotic development by limiting transport of antibiotics to the bacterial cytosol. New methods to mimic this barrier would enable high-throughput studies for antibiotic development.

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Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are useful structures for mimicking cellular membranes, and they can be integrated with a variety of sensors. Although there are a variety of methods for forming SLBs, many of these methods come with limitations in terms of the lipid compositions that can be employed and the substrates upon which the SLBs can be deposited. Here we demonstrate the use of an all-aqueous chaotropic agent exchange process that can be used to form SLBs on two different substrate materials: SiO, which is compatible with traditional SLB formation by vesicle fusion, and AlO, which is not compatible with vesicle fusion.

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Antibiotic resistance is a major challenge in modern medicine. The unique double membrane structure of gram-negative bacteria limits the efficacy of many existing antibiotics and adds complexity to antibiotic development by limiting transport of antibiotics to the bacterial cytosol. New methods to mimic this barrier would enable high-throughput studies for antibiotic development.

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SUMMARYExtracellular vesicles (EVs) have been recognized throughout scientific communities as potential vehicles of intercellular communication in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes, thereby influencing various physiological and pathological functions of both parent and recipient cells. This review provides an in-depth exploration of the multifaceted roles of EVs in the context of bacteria and protozoan parasite EVs, shedding light on their contributions to physiological processes and disease pathogenesis. These studies highlight EVs as a conserved mechanism of cellular communication, which may lead us to important breakthroughs in our understanding of infection, mechanisms of pathogenesis, and as indicators of disease.

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Gram-negative bacteria produce outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) that play a critical role in cell-cell communication and virulence. OMVs have emerged as promising therapeutic agents for various biological applications such as vaccines and targeted drug delivery. However, the full potential of OMVs is currently constrained by inherent heterogeneities, such as size and cargo differences, and traditional ensemble assays are limited in their ability to reveal OMV heterogeneity.

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Lipid droplets (LDs) are organelles that are necessary for eukaryotic and prokaryotic metabolism and energy storage. They have a unique structure consisting of a spherical phospholipid monolayer encasing neutral lipids such as triacylglycerol (TAG). LDs have garnered increased interest for their implications in disease and for drug delivery applications.

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Oxidative stress leads to the production of oxidized phospholipids (oxPLs) that modulate the biophysical properties of phospholipid monolayers and bilayers. As many immune cells are responsible for surveilling cells and tissues for the presence of oxPLs, oxPL-dependent mechanisms have been suggested as targets for treating chronic kidney disease, atherosclerosis, diabetes, and cancer metastasis. This review details recent experimental and computational studies that characterize oxPLs' behaviors in various monolayers and bilayers.

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Microdomains in lipid bilayer membranes are routinely imaged using organic fluorophores that preferentially partition into one of the lipid phases, resulting in fluorescence contrast. Here, we show that membrane microdomains in giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) can be visualized with europium luminescence using a complex of europium III (Eu) and tetracycline (EuTc). EuTc is unlike typical organic lipid probes in that it is a coordination complex with a unique excitation/emission wavelength combination (396/617 nm), a very large Stokes shift (221 nm), and a very narrow emission bandwidth (8 nm).

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Gram-negative bacteria produce outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) that play a critical role in cell-cell communication and virulence. Despite being isolated from a single population of bacteria, OMVs can exhibit heterogeneous size and toxin content, which can be obscured by assays that measure ensemble properties. To address this issue, we utilize fluorescence imaging of individual OMVs to reveal size-dependent toxin sorting.

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Bacteriophages are highly abundant molecular machines that have evolved proteins to target the surface of host bacterial cells. Given the ubiquity of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) on the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, we reasoned that targeting proteins from bacteriophages could be leveraged to target the surface of Gram-negative pathogens for biotechnological applications. To this end, a short tail fiber (GP12) from the T4 bacteriophage, which infects Escherichia coli (E.

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Analytical characterization of small biological particles, such as extracellular vesicles (EVs), is complicated by their extreme heterogeneity in size, lipid, membrane protein, and cargo composition. Analysis of individual particles is essential for illuminating particle property distributions that are obscured by ensemble measurements. To enable high-throughput analysis of individual particles, liftoff nanocontact printing (LNCP) is used to define hexagonal antibody and toxin arrays that have a 425 nm dot size, on average, and 700 nm periodicity.

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Oleosin is a hydrophobic protein that punctuates the surface of plant seed lipid droplets, which are 20 nm-100 μm entities that serve as reservoirs for high-energy metabolites. Oleosin is purported to stabilize lipid droplets, but its exact mechanism of stabilization has not been established. Probing the structure of oleosin directly in lipid droplets is challenging due to the size of lipid droplets and their high degree of light scattering.

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We show that photosensitized phospholipid oxidation, initiated by the lipid-conjugated fluorophore TopFluor-PC, causes defects, namely, membrane tubes and vesicle-like structures, in supported lipid bilayers (SLBs). Lipid oxidation is detrimental to the integrity of the lipid molecules; when oxidized, they undergo a conformational expansion, which causes membrane tubes to protrude from the SLB. Lipid oxidation is verified by FT-IR spectroscopy, and area expansion is observed in Langmuir trough experiments.

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Lipid droplets also known as oil bodies are found in a variety of organisms and function as stores of high-energy metabolites. Recently, there has been interest in using lipid droplets for protein production and drug delivery. Artificial lipid droplets have been previously prepared, but their short lifetime in solution and inhomogeneity has severely limited their applicability.

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In the nervous system, a myelin sheath that originates from oligodendrocytes or Schwann cells wraps around axons to facilitate electrical signal transduction. The interface between an axon and myelin is maintained by a number of biomolecular interactions. Among the interactions are those between GD1a and GT1b gangliosides on the axon and myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) on myelin.

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Single-molecule behavior under mechanical perturbation has been characterized widely to understand many biological processes. However, methods such as atomic force microscopy have limited temporal resolution, while Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) only allow conformations to be inferred. Fluorescence microscopy, on the other hand, allows real-time in situ visualization of single molecules in various flow conditions.

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Refractometric sensors utilizing surface plasmon resonance (SPR) should satisfy a series of performance metrics, bulk sensitivity, thin-film sensitivity, refractive-index resolution, and high-Q-factor resonance, as well as practical requirements such as manufacturability and the ability to separate optical and fluidic paths via reflection-mode sensing. While many geometries such as nanohole, nanoslit, and nanoparticles have been employed, it is nontrivial to engineer nanostructures to satisfy all of the aforementioned requirements. We combine gold nanohole arrays with a water-index-matched Cytop film to demonstrate reflection-mode, high--factor ( = 143) symmetric plasmonic sensor architecture.

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Gangliosides are glycolipids that are enriched on the outer surface of cell membranes. Gangliosides are receptors for a number of signaling molecules and toxins, and therefore are often incorporated into biosensors. Many of these biosensors incorporate gangliosides into supported lipid bilayers which are formed by the spontaneous rupture of unilamellar vesicles on glass or SiO substrates.

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A label-free, non-dispruptive, and real-time analytical device to monitor the dynamic features of biomolecules and their interactions with neighboring molecules is an essential prerequisite for biochip- and diagonostic assays. To explore one of the central questions on the lipid-lipid interactions in the course of the liquid-ordered (l) domain formation, called rafts, we developed a method of reconstituting continuous but spatially heterogeneous lipid membrane platforms with molayer-bilayer juntions (MBJs) that enable to form the l domains in a spatiotemporally controlled manner. This allows us to detect the time-lapse dynamics of the lipid-lipid interactions during raft formation and resultant membrane phase changes together with the raft-associated receptor-ligand binding through the surface plasmon resonance (SPR).

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Fluorescent lipid probes are commonly used to label membranes of cells and model membranes like giant vesicles, liposomes, and supported lipid bilayers (SLB). Here, we show that excitation of fluorescent lipid probes with BODIPY-like conjugates results in a significant acceleration of the rupture and SLB formation process for unsaturated phospholipid vesicles on SiO surfaces. The resulting SLBs also have smaller measured masses, which is indicative of a reduction in membrane thickness and/or membrane density.

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rHIgM22 is a recombinant human monoclonal IgM designed to promote remyelination, and it is currently in Phase I clinical trials in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). In animal models of demyelination, a single low dose of rHIgM22 stimulates oligodendrocyte maturation, induces remyelination, preserves axons, and slows the decline of locomotor deficits. Natural autoantibodies like rHIgM22 typically bind to multiple antigens with weak affinity.

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A plug and socket approach for tightening polyelectrolyte multilayers is introduced based on the use pendant β-cyclodextrin groups. Prototypical multilayers derived from poly(sodium 4-styrene sulfonate) and β-cyclodextrin-containing poly(4-vinylbenzyltrimethylammonium chloride) are described. Evidence for tightened multilayers has been obtained from gas permeation, swelling and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) measurements.

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A rapid, label-free, and broadly applicable chemical analysis platform for nanovesicles and subcellular components is highly desirable for diagnostic assays. We demonstrate an integrated nanogap plasmonic sensing platform that combines subvolt dielectrophoresis (DEP) trapping, gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), and a lineated illumination scheme for real-time, surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) imaging of biological nanoparticles. Our system is capable of isolating suspended sub-100 nm vesicles and imaging the Raman spectra of their cargo within seconds, 100 times faster than conventional point-scan Raman systems.

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