57 results match your criteria: "Institute of Applied Sciences and Intelligent Systems "E. Caianiello[Affiliation]"

Using diatom chain length as a bioindicator of heavy-metals contamination in marine environments.

J Hazard Mater

December 2024

Physics Department "E. Pancini", University Federico II, via Cintia, 80126 Napoli, Italy; CNR-ISASI, Institute of Applied Sciences and Intelligent Systems "E. Caianiello", via Campi Flegrei 34, 80078 Pozzuoli, Italy. Electronic address:

The increasing release of toxic heavy metals into marine environments poses significant risks due to their persistence and bioaccumulation. Diatoms are ideal bioindicators because of their sensitivity to environmental changes. Despite traditional methods for detecting these persistent pollutants effectively identify composition and concentration, they are time-consuming, they often require the use of harmful reagents, and do not allow a fast assessment of detrimental impacts on marine organisms.

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Thin free-standing liquid films manipulation: device design to turn on/off gravity in flow regimes for thickness map control and for material structuring.

Soft Matter

November 2024

Dipartimento di Ingegneria Chimica, dei Materiali e della Produzione Industriale, P.le Tecchio 80, 80125 Naples, Italy.

The manipulation and control of free-standing liquid film drainage dynamics is of paramount importance in many technological fields and related products, ranging from liquid lenses to liquid foams and 2D structures. In this context, we theoretically design and introduce a device where we can reversibly drive flow regime switch between viscous-capillary and viscous-gravity in a thin free-standing liquid film by altering its shape, allowing us to manipulate and stabilize the film thickness over time. The device, which mainly consists of a syringe pump, a pressure transducer, and a 3D-printed cylinder, is coupled with a digital holography setup to measure, in real time, the evolution of the local film thickness map, revealing characteristic features of viscous-capillary and viscous-gravity driven drainage regimes.

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Lab-on-a-Chip microfluidic devices present an innovative and cost-effective platform in the current trend of miniaturization and simplification of imaging flow cytometry; they are excellent candidates for high-throughput single-cell analysis. In such microfluidic platforms, cell tracking becomes a fundamental tool for investigating biophysical processes, from intracellular dynamics to the characterization of cell motility and migration. However, high-throughput and long-term cell tracking puts a high demand on the consumption of computing resources.

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Intrinsic Superchirality in Planar Plasmonic Metasurfaces.

Nano Lett

August 2024

Department of Physics, NLHT-Lab, University of Calabria and CNR-NANOTEC, Institute of Nanotechnology, 87036 Rende, Italy.

Plasmonic metasurfaces with spatial symmetry breaking are crucial materials with significant applications in fields such as polarization-controlled photonic devices and nanophotonic platforms for chiral sensing. In this paper, we introduce planar plasmonic metasurfaces, less than one-tenth of a wavelength thick, featuring nanocavities formed by three equilateral triangles. This configuration creates uniform, thin metasurfaces.

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Enhanced tissue slide imaging in the complex domain via cross-explainable GAN for Fourier ptychographic microscopy.

Comput Biol Med

September 2024

NeuroneLab - Department of Management and Innovation Systems (DISA-MIS), University of Salerno, Via Giovanni Paolo II, 132, Fisciano (SA), 84084, Italy; CNR-ISASI, Institute of Applied Sciences and Intelligent Systems "E. Caianiello", Via Campi Flegrei 34, Pozzuoli (NA), 80078, Italy.

Article Synopsis
  • - Achieving high-quality microscopy is crucial for diagnostic imaging in clinical practice, and Fourier Ptychography (FP) excels by providing wide-field, high-resolution images, though it requires significant computational resources.
  • - This study explores using Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) for enhancing FP images of human kidney samples, demonstrating their ability to improve the visibility of detailed structures while maintaining high resolution.
  • - The research validates GAN-based image enhancement through methods such as cross-explainability and surveys with nephrologists, highlighting the effectiveness of this approach in accurate image reconstruction and its potential in clinical settings.
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The stiffness of the extracellular matrix plays a crucial role in cell motility and spreading, influencing cell morphology through cytoskeleton organization and transmembrane proteins' expression. In this context, mechanical characterization of both cells and the extracellular matrix gains prominence for enhanced diagnostics and clinical decision-making. Here, we investigate the combined effect of mechanotransduction and ionizing radiations on altering cells' mechanical properties, analysing mammary cell lines (MCF10A and MDA-MB-231) after X-ray radiotherapy (2 and 10 Gy).

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Probiotic bacteria are widely used in pharmaceutics to offer health benefits. Microencapsulation is used to deliver probiotics into the human body. Capsules in the stomach have to keep bacteria constrained until release occurs in the intestine.

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Accumulation of bioavailable heavy metals in aquatic environment poses a serious threat to marine communities and human health due to possible trophic transfers through the food chain of toxic, non-degradable, exogenous pollutants. Copper (Cu) is one of the most spread heavy metals in water, and can severely affect primary producers at high doses. Here we show a novel imaging test to assay the dose-dependent effects of Cu on live microalgae identifying stress conditions when they are still capable of sustaining a positive growth.

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Wheat is one of the most cultivated cereals thanks to both its nutritional value and its versatility to technological transformation. Nevertheless, the growth and yield of wheat, as well as of the other food crops, can be strongly limited by many abiotic and biotic stress factors. To face this need, new methodological approaches are required to optimize wheat cultivation from both a qualitative and quantitative point of view.

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Breast cancer is one of the most spread and monitored pathologies in high-income countries. After breast biopsy, histological tissue is stored in paraffin, sectioned and mounted. Conventional inspection of tissue slides under benchtop light microscopes involves paraffin removal and staining, typically with H&E.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how nanostructures in organisms, like diatoms, can manipulate light for communication and photosynthesis.
  • Diatoms, tiny microalgae with silica cell walls, have evolved unique structures to efficiently handle light, enhancing their photosynthetic capabilities.
  • Using various imaging and simulation techniques, the research shows that these structures help optimize light for photosynthesis while protecting against harmful UV radiation.
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Article Synopsis
  • * Traditional methods to study lysosomes involve techniques that can alter cellular structures and behaviors, limiting their effectiveness in assessing cellular status.
  • * The study demonstrates a new method called Quantitative Phase Imaging through Digital Holographic (QPI-DH) that allows for label-free detection of lysosomes, proving effective in identifying differences in lysosomal function between diseased and healthy cells.
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Melanins are pigments employed in food, cosmetic, and textile industries, manufactured by extraction from cuttlefishes. Their biotechnological production by Streptomycetes, instead, has been poorly investigated so far. In this paper, for the first time, the strain DSM 40314 was tested as an extracellular melanin producer by investigating the influence of diverse temperatures (26, 28, and 30 °C) and pH values (6.

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Despite remarkable progresses in quantitative phase imaging (QPI) microscopes, their wide acceptance is limited due to the lack of specificity compared with the well-established fluorescence microscopy. In fact, the absence of fluorescent tag prevents to identify subcellular structures in single cells, making challenging the interpretation of label-free 2D and 3D phase-contrast data. Great effort has been made by many groups worldwide to address and overcome such limitation.

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Application of Raman spectroscopy to the evaluation of F-actin changes in sea urchin eggs at fertilization.

Zygote

February 2024

Department of Research Infrastructures for Marine Biological Resources, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, 80121Naples, Italy.

The actin filaments on the surface of echinoderm oocytes and eggs readily undergo massive reorganization during meiotic maturation and fertilization. In sea urchin eggs, the actin cytoskeletal response to the fertilizing sperm is fast enough to accompany Ca signals and to guide sperm's entry into the egg. Although recent work using live cell imaging technology confirmed changes in the actin polymerization status in fertilized eggs, as was previously shown using light and electron microscopy, it failed to provide experimental evidence of F-actin depolymerization a few seconds after insemination, which is concurrent with the sperm-induced Ca release.

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To efficiently tackle certain tumor types, finding new biomarkers for rapid and complete phenotyping of cancer cells is highly demanded. This is especially the case for the most common pediatric solid tumor of the sympathetic nervous system, namely, neuroblastoma (NB). Liquid biopsy is in principle a very promising tool for this purpose, but usually enrichment and isolation of circulating tumor cells in such patients remain difficult due to the unavailability of universal NB cell-specific surface markers.

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In-flow phase-contrast tomography provides a 3D refractive index of label-free cells in cytometry systems. Its major limitation, as with any quantitative phase imaging approach, is the lack of specificity compared to fluorescence microscopy, thus restraining its huge potentialities in single-cell analysis and diagnostics. Remarkable results in introducing specificity are obtained through artificial intelligence (AI), but only for adherent cells.

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Liquid biopsy is a valuable emerging alternative to tissue biopsy with great potential in the noninvasive early diagnostics of cancer. Liquid biopsy based on single cell analysis can be a powerful approach to identify circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the bloodstream and could provide new opportunities to be implemented in routine screening programs. Since CTCs are very rare, the accurate classification based on high-throughput and highly informative microscopy methods should minimize the false negative rates.

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Composite materials have been used for many years in a wide variety of sectors starting from aerospace and nautical up to more commonly used uses such as bicycles, glasses, and so on. The characteristics that have made these materials popular are mainly their low weight, resistance to fatigue, and corrosion. In contrast to the advantages, however, it should be noted that the manufacturing processes of composite materials are not eco-friendly, and their disposal is rather difficult.

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Space-time digital holography (STDH) maps holograms in a hybrid space-time domain to achieve extended field of view, resolution enhanced, quantitative phase-contrast microscopy and velocimetry of flowing objects in a label-free modality. In STDH, area sensors can be replaced by compact and faster linear sensor arrays to augment the imaging throughput and to compress data from a microfluidic video sequence into one single hybrid hologram. However, in order to ensure proper imaging, the velocity of the objects in microfluidic channels has to be well-matched to the acquisition frame rate, which is the major constraint of the method.

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In recent years, intracellular LDs have been discovered to play an important role in several pathologies. Therefore, detection of LDs would provide an in-demand diagnostic tool if coupled with flow-cytometry to give significant statistical analysis and especially if the diagnosis is made in full non-invasive mode. Here we combine the experimental results of in-flow tomographic phase microscopy with a suited numerical simulation to demonstrate that intracellular LDs can be easily detected through a label-free approach based on the direct analysis of the 2D quantitative phase maps recorded by a holographic flow cytometer.

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Quantitative Phase Imaging (QPI) has gained popularity in bioimaging because it can avoid the need for cell staining, which in some cases is difficult or impossible. However, as a result, QPI does not provide labelling of various specific intracellular structures. Here we show a novel computational segmentation method based on statistical inference that makes it possible for QPI techniques to identify the cell nucleus.

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This feature issue of presents a cross-section of interesting and emerging work of relevance to the use of biological cells or microorganisms in optics and photonics. The technologies demonstrated here aim to address challenges to meeting the optical imaging, sensing, manipulating and therapy needs in a natural or even endogenous manner. This collection of 15 papers includes the novel results on designs of optical systems or photonic devices, image-assisted diagnosis and treatment, and manipulation or sensing methods, with applications for both and use.

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The water-oil interface is an environment that is often found in many contexts of the natural sciences and technological arenas. This interface has always been considered a special environment as it is rich in different phenomena, thus stimulating numerous studies aimed at understanding the abundance of physico-chemical problems that occur there. The intense research activity and the intriguing results that emerged from these investigations have inspired scientists to consider the water-oil interface even as a suitable setting for bottom-up nanofabrication processes, such as molecular self-assembly, or fabrication of nanofilms or nano-devices.

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The global marine environment is increasingly affected by human activities causing climate change, eutrophication, and pollution. These factors influence the metabolic mechanisms of phytoplankton species, such as diatoms. Among other pollutant agents, heavy metals can have dramatic effects on diatom viability.

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