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Nanotopography mediated osteogenic differentiation of human dental pulp derived stem cells

2017, Bachhuka, Akash, Delalat, Bahman, Ghaemi, Soraya Rasi, Gronthos, Stan, Voelcker, Nicolas H., Vasilev, Krasimir

Advanced medical devices, treatments and therapies demand an understanding of the role of interfacial properties on the cellular response. This is particularly important in the emerging fields of cell therapies and tissue regeneration. In this study, we evaluate the role of surface nanotopography on the fate of human dental pulp derived stem cells (hDPSC). These stem cells have attracted interest because of their capacity to differentiate to a range of useful lineages but are relatively easy to isolate. We generated and utilized density gradients of gold nanoparticles which allowed us to examine, on a single substrate, the influence of nanofeature density and size on stem cell behavior. We found that hDPSC adhered in greater numbers and proliferated faster on the sections of the gradients with higher density of nanotopography features. Furthermore, greater surface nanotopography density directed the differentiation of hDPSC to osteogenic lineages. This study demonstrates that carefully tuned surface nanotopography can be used to manipulate and guide the proliferation and differentiation of these cells. The outcomes of this study can be important in the rational design of culture substrates and vehicles for cell therapies, tissue engineering constructs and the next generation of biomedical devices where control over the growth of different tissues is required.

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Nanoscale disintegration kinetics of mesoglobules in aqueous poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) solutions revealed by small-angle neutron scattering and pressure jumps

2021, Niebuur, Bart-Jan, Chiappisi, Leonardo, Jung, Florian A., Zhang, Xiaohan, Schulte, Alfons, Papadakis, Christine M.

Identification and control of the disintegration mechanism of polymer nanoparticles are essential for applications in transport and release including polymer delivery systems. Structural changes during the disintegration of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) mesoglobules in aqueous solution are studied in situ and in real time using kinetic small-angle neutron scattering with a time resolution of 50 ms. Simultaneously length scales between 1 and 100 nm are resolved. By initiating phase separation through fast pressure jumps across the coexistence line, 3 wt% PNIPAM solutions are rapidly brought into the one-phase state. Starting at the same temperature (35.1 °C) and pressure (17 MPa) the target pressure is varied over the range 25–48 MPa, allowing to systematically alter the osmotic pressure of the solvent within the mesoglobules. Initially, the mesoglobules have a radius of gyration of about 80 nm and contain a small amount of water. Two disintegration mechanisms are identified: (i) for target pressures close to the coexistence line, single polymers are released from the surface of the mesoglobules, and the mesoglobules decrease in size, which takes ∼30 s. (ii) For target pressures more distant from the coexistence line, the mesoglobules are swollen by water, and subsequently the chains become more and more loosely associated. In this case, disintegration proceeds within less than 10 s, controlled by the osmotic pressure of the solvent.

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Surface polarization, field homogeneity, and dielectric breakdown in ordered and disordered nanodielectrics based on gold-polystyrene superlattices

2023, Buchheit, Roman, Niebuur, Bart-Jan, González-García, Lola, Kraus, Tobias

Hybrid dielectrics were prepared from dispersions of nanoparticles with gold cores (diameters from 2.9 nm to 8.2 nm) and covalently bound thiol-terminated polystyrene shells (5000 Da and 11 000 Da) in toluene. Their microstructure was investigated with small angle X-ray scattering and transmission electron microscopy. The particles arranged in nanodielectric layers with either face-centered cubic or random packing, depending on the ligand length and core diameter. Thin film capacitors were prepared by spin-coating inks on silicon substrates, contacted with sputtered aluminum electrodes, and characterized with impedance spectroscopy between 1 Hz and 1 MHz. The dielectric constants were dominated by polarization at the gold-polystyrene interfaces that we could precisely tune via the core diameter. There was no difference in the dielectric constant between random and supercrystalline particle packings, but the dielectric losses depended on the layer structure. A model that combines Maxwell-Wagner-Sillars theory and percolation theory described the relationship of the specific interfacial area and the dielectric constant quantitatively. The electric breakdown of the nanodielectric layers sensitively depended on particle packing. A highest breakdown field strength of 158.7 MV m−1 was found for the sample with 8.2 nm cores and short ligands that had a face-centered cubic structure. Breakdown apparently is initiated at the microscopic maxima of the electric field that depends on particle packing. The relevance of the results for industrially produced devices was demonstrated on inkjet printed thin film capacitors with an area of 0.79 mm2 on aluminum coated PET foils that retained their capacity of 1.24 ± 0.01 nF@10 kHz during 3000 bending cycles.

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Nanoscale friction on MoS2/graphene heterostructures

2023, Liu, Zhao, Szczefanowicz, Bartosz, Lopes, J. Marcelo J., Gan, Ziyang, George, Antony, Turchanin, Andrey, Bennewitz, Roland

Stacked hetero-structures of two-dimensional materials allow for a design of interactions with corresponding electronic and mechanical properties. We report structure, work function, and frictional properties of 1 to 4 layers of MoS2 grown by chemical vapor deposition on epitaxial graphene on SiC(0001). Experiments were performed by atomic force microscopy in ultra-high vacuum. Friction is dominated by adhesion which is mediated by a deformation of the layers to adapt the shape of the tip apex. Friction decreases with increasing number of MoS2 layers as the bending rigidity leads to less deformation. The dependence of friction on applied load and bias voltage can be attributed to variations in the atomic potential corrugation of the interface, which is enhanced by both load and applied bias. Minimal friction is obtained when work function differences are compensated.

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Nanomechanics of self-assembled DNA building blocks

2021, Penth, Michael, Schellnhuber, Kordula, Bennewitz, Roland, Blass, Johanna

DNA has become a powerful platform to design functional nanodevices. DNA nanodevices are often composed of self-assembled DNA building blocks that differ significantly from the structure of native DNA. In this study, we present Flow Force Microscopy as a massively parallel approach to study the nanomechanics of DNA self-assemblies on the single-molecular level. The high-throughput experiments performed in a simple microfluidic channel enable statistically meaningful studies with nanometer scale precision in a time frame of several minutes. A surprisingly high flexibility was observed for a typical construct used in DNA origami, reflected in a persistence length of 10.2 nm, a factor of five smaller than for native DNA. The enhanced flexibility is attributed to the discontinuous backbone of DNA self-assemblies that facilitate base pair opening by thermal fluctuations at the end of hybridized oligomers. We believe that the results will contribute to the fundamental understanding of DNA nanomechanics and help to improve the design of DNA nanodevices with applications in biological analysis and clinical research.