Publikationen

2015
X-ray imaging with scintillator-sensitized hybrid organic photodetectors

Büchele, Patric | Richter, Moses | Tedde, Sandro F. | Matt, Gebhard J. | Ankah, Genesis N. | Fischer, Rene | Biele, Markus | Metzger, Wilhelm | Lilliu, Samuele | Bikondoa, Oier | Macdonald, J. Emyr | Brabec, Christoph J. | Kraus, Tobias | Lemmer, Uli | Schmidt, Oliver

DOI:

Medical X-ray imaging requires cost-effective and high-resolution flat-panel detectors for the energy range between 20 and 120 keV. Solution-processed photodetectors provide the opportunity to fabricate detectors with a large active area at low cost. Here, we present a disruptive approach that improves the resolution of such detectors by incorporating terbium-doped gadolinium oxysulfide scintillator particles into an organic photodetector matrix. The X-ray induced light emission from the scintillators is absorbed within hundreds of nanometres, which is negligible compared with the pixel size. Hence, optical crosstalk, a limiting factor in the resolution of scintillator-based X-ray detectors, is minimized. The concept is validated with a 256 × 256 pixel detector with a resolution of 4.75 lp mm−1 at a MTF = 0.2, significantly better than previous stacked scintillator-based flat-panel detectors. We achieved a resolution that proves the feasibility of solution-based detectors in medical applications. Time-resolved electrical characterization showed enhanced charge carrier mobility with increased scintillator filling, which is explained by morphological changes.

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Nature Photonics ,
2015, 9 843-848.

Flexible distributed bragg reflectors from nanocolumnar templates

Calvo, Mauricio E. | González-García, Lola | Parra-Barranco, Julián | Barranco, Angel | Jiménez-Solano, Alberto | González-Elipe, Agustín R. | Míguez, Hernán

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A flexible distributed Bragg reflector is made by the infiltration of a nanocolumnar array with polydimethyl siloxane oligomers. The high optical reflectance displayed by the final material is a direct consequence of the high refractive index contrast of the columnar layers whereas the structural stability is due to the polymer properties.

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Advanced Optical Materials ,
2015, 3 (2), 171-175.

OPEN ACCESS
Protein identity and environmental parameters determine the final physico-chemical properties of protein-coated metal nanoparticles

Dewald, Inna | Isakin, Olga | Schubert, Jonas | Kraus, Tobias | Chanana, Munish

DOI:

When a nanomaterial enters a biological system, proteins adsorb onto the particle surface and alter the surface properties of nanoparticles, causing drastic changes in physico-chemical properties such as hydrodynamic size, surface charge and aggregation state, thus giving a completely new and undefined physico-chemical identity to the nanoparticles. In the present work, we study the impact of the protein identity (molecular weight and isoelectric point) and the environmental conditions (pH and ionic strength) on the final physico-chemical properties of a model nanoparticle system, i.e. gold nanoparticles. Gold nanoparticles either form stable dispersions or agglomerate spontaneously when mixed with protein solutions, depending on the protein and the experimental conditions. Strikingly, the agglomerates redisperse to individually dispersed and colloidally stable nanoparticles, depending on the purification pH. The final protein coated nanoparticles exhibit specific stabilities and surface charges that depend on protein type and the conditions during its adsorption. By understanding the interactions of nanoparticles with proteins under controlled conditions, we can define the protein corona of the NPs and thus their physico-chemical properties in various media.

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Journal of Physical Chemistry C ,
2015, 119 (45), 25482-25492.

Maximizing transfection efficiency of vertically aligned silicon nanowire arrays

Elnathan, Roey | Delalat, Bahman | Brodoceanu, Daniel | Alhmoud, Hashim | Harding, Frances J. | Buehler, Katrin | Nelson, Adrienne | Isa, Lucio | Kraus, Tobias | Voelcker, Nicolas H.

DOI:

Vertically aligned silicon nanowire (VA-SiNW) arrays are emerging as a powerful new tool for gene delivery by means of mechanical transfection. In order to utilize this tool efficiently, uncertainties around the required design parameters need to be removed. Here, a combination of nanosphere lithography and templated metal-assisted wet chemical etching is used to fabricate VA-SiNW arrays with a range of diameters, heights, and densities. This fabrication strategy allows identification of critical parameters of surface topography and consequently the design of SiNW arrays that deliver plasmid with high transfection efficiency into a diverse range of human cells whilst maintaining high cell viability. These results illuminate the cell-materials interactions that mediate VA-SiNW transfection and have the potential to transform gene therapy and underpin future treatment modalities.

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Advanced Functional Materials ,
2015, 25 (46), 7215-7225.

Versatile particle-based route to engineer vertically aligned silicon nanowire arrays and nanoscale pores

Elnathan, Roey | Isa, Lucio | Brodoceanu, Daniel | Nelson, Adrienne | Harding, Frances J. | Delalat, Bahman | Kraus, Tobias | Voelcker, Nicolas H.

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Control over particle self-assembly is a prerequisite for the colloidal templating of lithographical etching masks to define nanostructures. This work integrates and combines for the first time bottom-up and top-down approaches, namely, particle self-assembly at liquid?liquid interfaces and metal-assisted chemical etching, to generate vertically aligned silicon nanowire (VA-SiNW) arrays and, alternatively, arrays of nanoscale pores in a silicon wafer. Of particular importance, and in contrast to current techniques, including conventional colloidal lithography, this approach provides excellent control over the nanowire or pore etching site locations and decouples nanowire or pore diameter and spacing. The spacing between pores or nanowires is tuned by adjusting the specific area of the particles at the liquid?liquid interface before deposition. Hence, the process enables fast and low-cost fabrication of ordered nanostructures in silicon and can be easily scaled up. We demonstrate that the fabricated VA-SiNW arrays can be used as in vitro transfection platforms for transfecting human primary cells.

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces ,
2015, 7 (42), 23717-23724.

Ageing of alkylthiol-stabilized gold nanoparticles

Lacava, Johann | Weber, Anika | Kraus, Tobias

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The ageing of spherical gold nanoparticles having 6-nm-diameter cores and a ligand shell of dodecanethiol is investigated under different storage conditions. Losses caused by agglomeration and changes in optical particle properties are quantified. Changes in colloidal stability are probed by analytical centrifugation in a polar solvent mixture. Chemical changes are detected by elementary analysis of particles and solvent. Fractionation occurs under all storage conditions. Ageing is not uniform but broadens the property distributions of the particles. Small-number statistics in the ligand shell density and the morphological heterogeneity of particles are possible explanations. Washing steps exacerbate ageing, a process that could not be fully reversed by excess ligands. Dry storage is not preferable to storage in solvent. Storage under inert argon atmosphere reduces losses more than all other conditions but could not prevent it entirely.

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Particle & Particle Systems Characterization ,
2015, 32 (4), 458-466.

Sintering of ultrathin gold nanowires for transparent electronics

Maurer, Johannes H. M. | González-García, Lola | Reiser, Beate | Kanelidis, Ioannis | Kraus, Tobias

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Ultrathin gold nanowires (AuNWs) with diameters below 2 nm and high aspect ratios are considered to be a promising base material for transparent electrodes. To achieve the conductivity expected for this system, oleylamine must be removed. Herein we present the first study on the conductivity, optical transmission, stability, and structure of AuNW networks before and after sintering with different techniques. Freshly prepared layers consisting of densely packed AuNW bundles were insulating and unstable, decomposing into gold spheres after a few days. Plasma treatments increased the conductivity and stability, coarsened the structure, and left the optical transmission virtually unchanged. Optimal conditions reduced sheet resistances to 50 Ω/sq.

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces ,
2015, 7 (15), 7838-7842.

Microwave heating of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)-conjugated gold nanoparticles for temperature-controlled display of concanavalin A

Vasani, Roshan B. | Janardanan, Nayana | Prieto-Simón, Beatriz | Cifuentes-Rius, Anna | Bradley, Siobhan J. | Moore, Eli | Kraus, Tobias | Voelcker, Nicolas H.

DOI:

We demonstrate microwave-induced heating of gold nanoparticles and nanorods. An appreciably higher and concentration-dependent microwave-induced heating rate was observed with aqueous dispersions of the nanomaterials as opposed to pure water and other controls. Grafted with the thermoresponsive polymer poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), these gold nanomaterials react to microwave-induced heating with a conformational change in the polymer shell, leading to particle aggregation. We subsequently covalently immobilize concanavalin A (Con A) on the thermoresponsive gold nanoparticles. Con A is a bioreceptor commonly used in bacterial sensors because of its affinity for carbohydrates on bacterial cell surfaces. The microwave-induced thermal transitions of the polymer reversibly switch on and off the display of Con A on the particle surface and hence the interactions of the nanomaterials with carbohydrate-functionalized surfaces. This effect was determined using linear sweep voltammetry on a methyl-α-d-mannopyranoside-functionalized electrode.

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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces ,
2015, 7 (50), 27755-27764.

AQUA cloning: A versatile and simple enzyme-free cloning approach

Beyer, H. M. | Gonschorek, P. | Samodelov, S. L. | Meier, M. | Weber, Wilfried | Zurbriggen, M. D.

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Assembly cloning is increasingly replacing conventional restriction enzyme and DNAligase-dependent cloning methods for reasons of efficiency and performance. Here, we describe AQUA (advanced quick assembly), a simple and versatile seamless assembly cloning approach. We demonstrate the applicability and versatility of AQUA Cloning in selected proof-of-principle applications including targeted insertion-, deletion- and sitedirected point-mutagenesis, and combinatorial cloning. Furthermore, we show the one pot de novo assembly of multiple DNA fragments into a single circular plasmid encoding a complex light- and chemically-regulated Boolean A NIMPLY B logic operation. AQUA Cloning harnesses intrinsic in vivo processing of linear DNA fragments with short regions of homology of 16 to 32 bp mediated by Escherichia coli. It does not require any kits, enzymes or preparations of reagents and is the simplest assembly cloning protocol to date. © 2015 Beyer et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in an medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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PLOS ONE ,
2015, 10 (9),

OPEN ACCESS
Red Light-Regulated Reversible Nuclear Localization of Proteins in Mammalian Cells and Zebrafish

Beyer, H. M. | Juillot, S. | Herbst, K. | Samodelov, S. L. | Müller, K. | Schamel, W. W. | Römer, W. | Schäfer, E. | Nagy, F. | Strähle, U. | Weber, Wilfried | Zurbriggen, M. D.

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Protein trafficking in and out of the nucleus represents a key step in controlling cell fate and function. Here we report the development of a red light-inducible and far-red light-reversible synthetic system for controlling nuclear localization of proteins in mammalian cells and zebrafish. First, we synthetically reconstructed and validated the red light-dependent Arabidopsis phytochrome B nuclear import mediated by phytochrome-interacting factor 3 in a nonplant environment and support current hypotheses on the import mechanism in planta. On the basis of this principle we next regulated nuclear import and activity of target proteins by the spatiotemporal projection of light patterns. A synthetic transcription factor was translocated into the nucleus of mammalian cells and zebrafish to drive transgene expression. These data demonstrate the first in vivo application of a plant phytochrome-based optogenetic tool in vertebrates and expand the repertoire of available light-regulated molecular devices. © 2015 American Chemical Society.

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ACS Synthetic Biology ,
2015, 4 (9), 951-958.