78 research outputs found
UV-crosslinked Polymeric Materials for Encapsulation of ZnO Nanowires in Piezoelectric Fingerprint Sensors
The work presented here describes new UV-crosslinkable thin layer polymeric materials for the encapsulation of ZnO nanowires (NWs) in multi-NWs pressure based fingerprint sensors. Such innovative sensor is a novel technology for fingerprint capture developed within the PiezoMAT FP7 European project. The sensing principle is based on the piezoelectric property of ZnO NWs, on which a potential difference is generated when they undergo compression and/or bending forces. Since the pressure induced by the finger cannot be directly applied on the NWs, the deformation is applied through a polymeric material that aims at transferring forces from the finger onto the array of NWs without altering their integrity. Besides, since it is dedicated to be in direct contact with human finger or oil pollutants, the encapsulation layer must also exhibit chemical inertness, as well as hydrophobicity and oleophobicity
Polymer coated cerium oxide nanoparticles as oxidoreductase-like catalysts
Cerium oxide nanoparticles have been shown to mimic oxidoreductase enzymes by
catalyzing the decomposition of organic substrates and reactive oxygen species.
This mimicry can be found in superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxides,
harmful molecules produced in oxidative stress asso-ciated diseases. Despite
the fact that nanoparticle functionalization is mandatory in the context of
nanomedicine, the influence of polymer coatings on their enzyme-like catalytic
activity is poorly understood. In this work, six polymer coated cerium oxide
nanoparticles are prepared by associa-tion of 7.8 nm cerium oxide cores with
two poly(sodium acrylate) and four poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) grafted
copolymers with different terminal or anchoring end groups, such as phosphonic
acids. The superoxide dismutase-, catalase-, peroxidase- and oxidase-like
catalytic activities of the coated nanoparticles were systematically studied.
It is shown that the polymer coatings do not af-fect the superoxide
dismutase-like, impair the catalase-like and oxidase-like and surprisingly
im-proves peroxidase-like catalytic activities of cerium oxide nanoparticles.
It is also demonstrated that the particles coated with the PEG-grafted
copolymers perform better than the poly(acrylic acid) coated ones as
oxidoreductase-like enzymes, a result that confirms the benefit of having
phosphon-ic acids as anchoring groups at the particle surface.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, 3 table
Chemoinformatic-guided engineering of polyketide synthases
Polyketide synthase (PKS) engineering is an attractive method to generate new molecules such as commodity, fine and specialty chemicals. A central challenge in PKS design is replacing a partially reductive module with a fully reductive module through a reductive loop exchange, thereby generating a saturated β-carbon. In this work, we sought to establish an engineering strategy for reductive loop exchanges based on chemoinformatics, a field traditionally used in drug discovery. We first introduced a set of donor reductive loops of diverse genetic origin and chemical substrate structures into the first extension module of the lipomycin PKS (LipPKS1). These results demonstrated that chemical similarity between the substrate of the donor loops and recipient LipPKS1 correlated with product titers. Consequently, we identified donor loops with substrates chemically similar to LipPKS1 for further reductive loop exchanges, and we observed a statistically significant correlation with production. Reductive loops with the highest chemical similarity resulted in production of branched, short-chain fatty acids reaching a titer of 165 mg/L in Streptomyces albus J1074. Collectively, our work formulizes a new chemoinformatic paradigm for de novo PKS biosynthesis which may accelerate the production of valuable bioproducts
Salud mental en la comunidad en situaciones de desastre. Una revisión de los modelos de abordaje en la comunidad
Inhibition of Hedgehog Signaling Decreases Proliferation and Clonogenicity of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) have the ability to differentiate into osteoblasts, adipocytes and chondrocytes. We have previously shown that hMSC were endowed with a basal level of Hedgehog signaling that decreased after differentiation of these cells. Since hMSC differentiation is associated with growth-arrest we investigated the function of Hh signaling on cell proliferation. Here, we show that inhibition of Hh signaling, using the classical inhibitor cyclopamine, or a siRNA directed against Gli-2, leads to a decrease in hMSC proliferation. This phenomenon is not linked to apoptosis but to a block of the cells in the G0/G1 phases of the cell cycle. At the molecular level, it is associated with an increase in the active form of pRB, and a decrease in cyclin A expression and MAP kinase phosphorylation. Inhibition of Hh signaling is also associated with a decrease in the ability of the cells to form clones. By contrast, inhibition of Hh signaling during hMSC proliferation does not affect their ability to differentiate. This study demonstrates that hMSC are endowed with a basal Hedgehog signaling activity that is necessary for efficient proliferation and clonogenicity of hMSC. This observation unravels an unexpected new function for Hedgehog signaling in the regulation of human mesenchymal stem cells and highlights the critical function of this morphogen in hMSC biology
La rehabilitación cognitiva para pacientes con esquizofrenia de larga data: un desafío para los equipos de salud
Investigaciones en rehabilitación cognitiva para pacientes con esquizofrenia (2004-2013): una revisión temática en beneficio de propuestas para etapas iniciales del trastorno
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