5 results match your criteria: "Center of excellence NAMASTE[Affiliation]"
Nano Lett
August 2018
"Jožef Stefan Institute", Jamova cesta 39 , SI-1000 Ljubljana , Slovenia.
Although the link between the inhalation of nanoparticles and cardiovascular disease is well established, the causal pathway between nanoparticle exposure and increased activity of blood coagulation factors remains unexplained. To initiate coagulation tissue factor bearing epithelial cell membranes should be exposed to blood, on the other side of the less than a micrometre thin air-blood barrier. For the inhaled nanoparticles to promote coagulation, they need to bind lung epithelial-cell membrane parts and relocate them into the blood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
February 2018
Laboratory of Biophysics, Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Jozef Stefan Institute, Jamova 39, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia; Center of Excellence NAMASTE, Jamova 39, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Generating activatable probes that report about molecular vicinity through contact-based mechanisms such as aggregation can be very convenient. Specifically, such probes change a particular spectral property only at the intended biologically relevant target. Xanthene derivatives, for example rhodamines, are able to form aggregates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
December 2015
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Ljubljana, Aškerčeva 7, 1000, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
DC-SIGN, an antigen-uptake receptor in dendritic cells (DCs), has a clear role in the immune response but, conversely, can also facilitate infection by providing entry of pathogens into DCs. The key action in both processes is internalization into acidic endosomes and lysosomes. Molecular probes that bind to DC-SIGN could thus provide a useful tool to study internalization and constitute potential antagonists against pathogens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
January 2013
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (MPIDS), 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
We explore the flow of a nematic liquid crystal in microfluidic channels with a rectangular cross section through experiments and numerical modeling. The flow profile and the liquid crystal orientational profile show three distinct regimes of weak, medium, and strong flow as the driving pressure is varied. These are identified by comparing polarizing optical microscopy experiments and numerical solutions of the nematofluidic equations of motion.
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