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Poly(vinyl acetate), PVAc, with a degree of polymerization Xn = 10 was prepared by chain-transfer radical polymerization using carbon tetrachloride and used as oligomeric plasticizer for commercial PVAc. However, the chlorinated chain ends cause a low thermal stability requiring mild Cl/H substitution. The product exhibits high thermal stability and excellent melt-compounding properties. Blends of oligomeric and commercial PVAc show single glass transition temperatures which decrease with higher oligomer content and exhibit small negative deviations from Fox' linear additivity rule. This indicates plasticization and miscibility being mainly due to entropic effects. Injection-moulded thick specimens show ductile behaviour at oligomer contents >10 wt %, while sheets with a thickness of 0.2–0.5 mm appear flexible already at 7.5 wt %. The oxygen permeability coefficients are an order of magnitude lower than those of low-density polyethylene. Due to the sum of their properties, the plasticized sheets present a promising alternative in the preparation of barrier materials.
Molecular Modeling Approach to the Prediction of Mechanical Properties of Silica-Reinforced Rubbers
(2014)
Recently, we have suggested a nanomechanical model for dissipative loss in filled elastomer networks in the context of the Payne effect. The mechanism is based on a total interfiller particle force exhibiting an intermittent loop, due to the combination of short-range repulsion and dispersion forces with a long-range elastic attraction. The sum of these forces leads, under external strain, to a spontaneous instability of “bonds” between the aggregates in a filler network and attendant energy dissipation. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to obtain chemically realistic forces between surface modified silica particles. The latter are combined with the above model to estimate the loss modulus and the low strain storage modulus in elastomers containing the aforementioned filler-compatibilizer systems. The model is compared to experimental dynamic moduli of silica filled rubbers. We find good agreement between the model predictions and the experiments as function of the compatibilizer's molecular structure and its bulk concentration.
Bei der Verarbeitung nachwachsender Rohstoffe entsteht aus Cellulose oder Stärke u. a. das wichtige Produkt Glucose. Diese niedermolekulare Kohlenhydratquelle wird üblicherweise als Substrat für biotechnologische und chemische Synthesen verwendet. Ein wirtschaftlich interessantes Oxidationsprodukt der Glucose ist Gluconsäure, die beispielsweise als Lebensmittelzusatzstoff (E 574), in der Medizin und Metallindustrie Verwendung findet. Die Umsetzung des Monosaccharids zu Gluconsäure erfolgt entweder durch mikrobielle Fermentation oder der Oxidation an heterogenen Katalysatoren. Die Zielsetzung der Studie ist die Untersuchung der Glucoseoxidation an magnetisierbaren Gold-Nanopartikeln unter nachfolgender Bypass-Separation des Katalysators mittels einer neuen Mini-HGMS-Einheit (Hochgradient-Magnetseparation). Dieser Filtertyp ermöglicht die selektive Trennung magnetischer Partikel aus Suspensionen mit hohem Feststoffgehalt oder Viskosität. Erste Ergebnisse zeigen eine Beladungskapazität des selbstkonstruierten Mini-HGMS von 550 mg goldbeschichteter magnetisierbarer Nanopartikel. Die Oxidation erfolgt bei einem pH-Wertvon 9, bei 40 °C und mit 100 mM Glucose in einem begasten Rührkesselreaktor. Das System soll zukünftig zum Katalysatorrecycling von hochviskosen und Feststoffbelasteten Produktströmen aus Bioraffinerien eingesetzt werden.
Aktiver und passiver antimikrobieller Oberflächenschutz durch funktionalisierte Mikropartikel
(2014)
Mikrobielle Verunreinigungen von Oberflächen in technischen und medizinischen Systemen sind allgegenwärtig. Sie basieren üblicherweise auf adsorptiven Oberflächenbindungen organischer Komponenten (Proteine und Fette) oder Membrankomponenten aerogener sowie wassergebundener Mikroorganismen. In laufenden Forschungsarbeiten wird eine aktive sowie passive Biomodifikation von Oberflächen zu deren Schutz vor Adsorption von Proteinen und Mikroorganismen verfolgt. Der antimikrobielle Schutz soll dabei sowohl durch die Mikrostrukturierung bzw. Rauheitsanpassung der Oberflächen durch deren Beschichtung mit Mikro-und Nanopartikeln erfolgen. Ferner werden antimikrobielle Enzyme und funktionelle Gruppen auf den Mikropartikeln gebunden, um den Oberflächenschutz zu verstärken. In ersten Versuchen wurden quartäre Ammoniumverbindungen auf eigens synthetisierten superparamagnetischen Eisenoxid-Nanopartikeln (Durchmesser 10 – 30 nm) immobilisiert und die wachstumshemmende Wirkung untersucht. Erste Ergebnisse zeigten, dass eine Konzentration von 10 mg mL⁻¹ der Ammoniumverbindung in einer Wachstumshemmung des verwendeten Gram-negativen Modell-Mikroorganismus E. coli GFPmut2 resultiert. Zurzeit werden synergistisch wirkende Kombinationen von Partikeln mit Proteasen, quartären Ammoniumverbindungen, hydrophoben Oberflächen und mikrostrukturierten Oberflächen als antimikrobieller Schutz untersucht.
Access to promising radiometals as isotopes for novel molecular imaging agents requires that they are routinely available and inexpensive to obtain. Proximity to a cyclotron center outfitted with solid target hardware, or to an isotope generator for the metal of interest is necessary, both of which can introduce significant hurdles in development of less common isotopes. Herein, we describe the production of ⁴⁴Sc (t₁⸝₂ = 3.97 h, Eavg,β⁺ = 1.47 MeV, branching ratio = 94.27%) in a solution target and an automated loading system which allows a quick turn-around between different radiometallic isotopes and therefore greatly improves their availability for tracer development. Experimental yields are compared to theoretical calculations.
Developing a new production host from a blueprint: Bacillus pumilus as an industrial enzyme producer
(2014)
The constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) and the pregnane X receptor (PXR) are closely related nuclear receptors involved in drug metabolism and play important roles in the mechanism of phenobarbital (PB)-induced rodent nongenotoxic hepatocarcinogenesis. Here, we have used a humanized CAR/PXR mouse model to examine potential species differences in receptor-dependent mechanisms underlying liver tissue molecular responses to PB. Early and late transcriptomic responses to sustained PB exposure were investigated in liver tissue from double knock-out CAR and PXR (CARᴷᴼ-PXRᴷᴼ), double humanized CAR and PXR (CARʰ-PXRʰ), and wild-type C57BL/6 mice. Wild-type and CARʰ-PXRʰ mouse livers exhibited temporally and quantitatively similar transcriptional responses during 91 days of PB exposure including the sustained induction of the xenobiotic response gene Cyp2b10, the Wnt signaling inhibitor Wisp1, and noncoding RNA biomarkers from the Dlk1-Dio3 locus. Transient induction of DNA replication (Hells, Mcm6, and Esco2) and mitotic genes (Ccnb2, Cdc20, and Cdk1) and the proliferation-related nuclear antigen Mki67 were observed with peak expression occurring between 1 and 7 days PB exposure. All these transcriptional responses were absent in CARᴷᴼ-PXRᴷᴼ mouse livers and largely reversible in wild-type and CARʰ-PXRʰ mouse livers following 91 days of PB exposure and a subsequent 4-week recovery period. Furthermore, PB-mediated upregulation of the noncoding RNA Meg3, which has recently been associated with cellular pluripotency, exhibited a similar dose response and perivenous hepatocyte-specific localization in both wild-type and CARʰ-PXRʰ mice. Thus, mouse livers coexpressing human CAR and PXR support both the xenobiotic metabolizing and the proliferative transcriptional responses following exposure to PB.
High gradient magnetic separation (HGMS) has been established since the early 1970s. A more recent application of these systems is the use in bioprocesses. To integrate the HGMS in a fermentation process, it is necessary to optimize the separation matrix with regard to the magnetic separation characteristics and permeability of the non-magnetizable components of the fermentation broth. As part of the work presented here, a combined fluidic and magnetic force finite element model simulation was created using the software COMSOL Multiphysics and compared with separation experiments. Finally, as optimal lattice orientation of the separation matrix, a transversal rhombohedral arrangement was defined. The high suitability of the new filter matrix has been verified by separation experiments.
Organic anion transporting polypeptide (Oatp) 1a/1b knockout and OATP1B1 and -1B3 humanized mouse models are promising tools for studying the roles of these transporters in drug disposition. Detailed characterization of these models will help to better understand their utility for predicting clinical outcomes. To advance this approach, we carried out a comprehensive analysis of these mouse lines by evaluating the compensatory changes in mRNA expression, quantifying the amounts of OATP1B1 and -1B3 protein by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry, and studying the active uptake in isolated hepatocytes and the pharmacokinetics of some prototypical substrates including statins. Major outcomes from these studies were 1) mostly moderate compensatory changes in only a few genes involved in drug metabolism and disposition, 2) a robust hepatic expression of OATP1B1 and -1B3 proteins in the respective humanized mouse models, and 3) functional activities of the human transporters in hepatocytes isolated from the humanized models with several substrates tested in vitro and with pravastatin in vivo. However, the expression of OATP1B1 and -1B3 in the humanized models did not significantly alter liver or plasma concentrations of rosuvastatin and pitavastatin compared with Oatp1a/1b knockout controls under the conditions used in our studies. Hence, although the humanized OATP1B1 and -1B3 mice showed in vitro and/or in vivo functional activity with some statins, further characterization of these models is required to define their potential use and limitations in the prediction of drug disposition and drug-drug interactions in humans.
In humans, 75% of all drugs are metabolized by the cytochrome P450-dependent monooxygenase system. Enzymes encoded by the CYP2C, CYP2D, and CYP3A gene clusters account for ∼80% of this activity. There are profound species differences in the multiplicity of cytochrome P450 enzymes, and the use of mouse models to predict pathways of drug metabolism is further complicated by overlapping substrate specificity between enzymes from different gene families. To establish the role of the hepatic and extrahepatic P450 system in drug and foreign chemical disposition, drug efficacy, and toxicity, we created a unique mouse model in which 30 cytochrome P450 genes from the Cyp2c, Cyp2d, and Cyp3a gene clusters have been deleted. Remarkably, despite a wide range of putative important endogenous functions, Cyp2c/2d/3a KO mice were viable and fertile, demonstrating that these genes have evolved primarily as detoxification enzymes. Although there was no overt phenotype, detailed examination showed Cyp2c/2d/3a KO mice had a smaller body size (15%) and larger livers (20%). Changes in hepatic morphology and a decreased blood glucose (30%) were also noted. A five-drug cocktail of cytochrome P450 isozyme probe substrates were used to evaluate changes in drug pharmacokinetics; marked changes were observed in either the pharmacokinetics or metabolites formed from Cyp2c, Cyp2d, and Cyp3a substrates, whereas the metabolism of the Cyp1a substrate caffeine was unchanged. Thus, Cyp2c/2d/3a KO mice provide a powerful model to study the in vivo role of the P450 system in drug metabolism and efficacy, as well as in chemical toxicity.
1. Drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters play important roles in the absorption, metabolism, tissue distribution and excretion of various compounds and their metabolites and thus can significantly affect their efficacy and safety. Furthermore, they can be involved in drug–drug interactions which can result in adverse responses, life-threatening toxicity or impaired efficacy. Significant species differences in the interaction of compounds with drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters have been described.
2. In order to overcome the limitation of animal models in accurately predicting human responses, a large variety of mouse models humanized for drug metabolizing enzymes and to a lesser extent drug transporters have been created.
3. This review summarizes the literature describing these mouse models and their key applications in studying the role of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters in drug bioavailability, tissue distribution, clearance and drug–drug interactions as well as in human metabolite testing and risk assessment.
4. Though such humanized mouse models have certain limitations, there is great potential for their use in basic research and for testing and development of new medicines. These limitations and future potentials will be discussed.
The Gram-positive endospore-forming bacterium Bacillus licheniformis can be found widely in nature and it is exploited in industrial processes for the manufacturing of antibiotics, specialty chemicals, and enzymes. Both in its varied natural habitats and in industrial settings, B. licheniformis cells will be exposed to increases in the external osmolarity, conditions that trigger water efflux, impair turgor, cause the cessation of growth, and negatively affect the productivity of cell factories in biotechnological processes. We have taken here both systems-wide and targeted physiological approaches to unravel the core of the osmostress responses of B. licheniformis. Cells were suddenly subjected to an osmotic upshift of considerable magnitude (with 1 M NaCl), and their transcriptional profile was then recorded in a time-resolved fashion on a genome-wide scale. A bioinformatics cluster analysis was used to group the osmotically up-regulated genes into categories that are functionally associated with the synthesis and import of osmostress-relieving compounds (compatible solutes), the SigB-controlled general stress response, and genes whose functional annotation suggests that salt stress triggers secondary oxidative stress responses in B. licheniformis. The data set focusing on the transcriptional profile of B. licheniformis was enriched by proteomics aimed at identifying those proteins that were accumulated by the cells through increased biosynthesis in response to osmotic stress. Furthermore, these global approaches were augmented by a set of experiments that addressed the synthesis of the compatible solutes proline and glycine betaine and assessed the growth-enhancing effects of various osmoprotectants. Combined, our data provide a blueprint of the cellular adjustment processes of B. licheniformis to both sudden and sustained osmotic stress.
In der Biotechnologie stellt Einzelstrang-DNA (ssDNA) eine Schlüsselrolle dar und fungiert z. B. als Baustein für die nanoskalige Feinmechanik oder als Affinitätsligand, ein sog. Aptamer. Hinsichtlich der industriellen Verwendung bieten Aptamere im Vergleich zu Antikörpern viele Vorteile, wie z. B. eine gute Renaturierung bzw. die Selektion für cytotoxische Moleküle. Aktuell wächst die Nachfrage für chimäre Aptamere von bis zu 200 n, um die simultane Bindung bzw. die Modifikation mehrerer Moleküle zu realisieren. Bis heute wird ssDNA mittels einer sequentiellen Synthese hergestellt, die eine Effizienz von ca. 99,5 % je Zyklus und bereits bei einer Produktlänge von 100 n nur noc hAusbeuten von max. 60 % zeigt. Um dem Bedarf an ssDNA im Bereich > 100 n zu entsprechen, wurden zwei enzymatische Verfahren zur Produktion dieser Makronukleotide entworfen. Die erste Technik basiert auf einerFestphasen-PCR und ermöglicht sowohlein Primer- als auch ein Templatrecycling. Das zweite Verfahren beruht auf einer Plasmidbasierten In-vivo-Amplifikation, der sog. AptaGENE®-Technologie. In einer einzigen Klonierung werden bis zu 100 Kopien des Monomers in einen Vektor kloniert. Nach einer Transformation folgt der reguläre Produktionsprozess in Form einer Kultivierung, Plasmidpräparation und sequenziellen Aufarbeitung von bis zu 6 · 10¹⁵ Makronukleotiden pro Milliliter Fermentationsvolumen.
The metabolic activity of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was observed using a light-addressable potentiometric sensor (LAPS). The dependency toward different glucose concentrations (17–200 mM) follows a Michaelis–Menten kinetics trajectory with Kₘ = 32.8 mM, and the obtained Kₘ value in this experiment was compared with that found in literature. In addition, the pH shift induced by glucose metabolism of tumor cells transfected with the HPV-16 genome (C3 cells) was successfully observed. These results indicate the possibility to determine the tumor cells metabolism with a LAPS-based measurement device.