42 results on '"Katir N"'
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2. Structural and spectroscopic properties of the second generation phosphorus–viologen “molecular asterisk”
- Author
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Furer, V.L., Vandukov, A.E., Katir, N., Majoral, J.P., El Kadib, A., Caminade, A.M., Bousmina, M., and Kovalenko, V.I.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Nanometer-thick defective graphene films decorated with oriented ruthenium nanoparticles. Higher activity of 101 vs 002 plane for silane-alcohol coupling and hydrogen transfer reduction
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Generalitat Valenciana, Anouar, A., Ramírez Grau, Rubén, Katir, N., Franconetti, Antonio, El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, García Gómez, Hermenegildo, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Generalitat Valenciana, Anouar, A., Ramírez Grau, Rubén, Katir, N., Franconetti, Antonio, El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, and García Gómez, Hermenegildo
- Abstract
Pyrolysis of ammonium alginate films containing Ru(NH)Cl leads to the formation of Ru nanoparticles (NPs) supported on defective graphene films. The procedure allows controlling the preferential facet orientation of small Ru NPs (5–20 nm), either 002 when the pyrolysis is carried out under Ar atmosphere or the 002 and 101 planes for pyrolysis in the presence of H. Ru is a metal difficult to prepare in preferential facet orientation compared to noble metals due to its higher reactivity and smaller particle size. Theoretical calculations substantiated the inhibition of Ru(0 0 2) growth by H adsorption, with restructuration to Ru(002–101) NPs. The defective graphene films of about 15 nm thickness containing one of the two types of Ru NPs (150 ng/cm) exhibit distinctive catalytic activity for the dehydrogenative coupling of silanes and alcohols and hydrogen transfer reduction of cyclohexanone. Comparison of turnover frequencies indicates that the 101 facet is more efficient than the 002 plane. Overall, this study illustrates that pyrolysis conditions can control the preferential crystallographic orientation of the growing Ru NPs and the relative catalytic activity of their specific crystallographic planes.
- Published
- 2022
4. Remarkable Activity of 002 Facet of Ruthenium Nanoparticles Grown on Graphene Films on the Photocatalytic CO2 Methanation
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Generalitat Valenciana, Anouar, A., García-Aboal, R., Atienzar, Pedro, Franconetti, A., Katir, N., El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, García Gómez, Hermenegildo, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Generalitat Valenciana, Anouar, A., García-Aboal, R., Atienzar, Pedro, Franconetti, A., Katir, N., El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, and García Gómez, Hermenegildo
- Abstract
In the context of diminishing atmospheric CO emissions, there is an urgent need to develop processes that can be carried out at a scale commensurate with appropriate CO volumes. One possible reaction is the transformation of CO to methane (Sabatier reaction). Due to its chemical stability, catalytic CO hydrogenation to methane is carried out at temperatures of 450 °C or higher and pressures above 5 bars, thus, requiring a significant energy input. One alternative possibility to conventional thermal catalysis is the use of solar light as the primary energy, performing the photocatalytic CO hydrogenation. In this broad context, the present study shows the photocatalytic activity of nanometric films of oriented Ru nanoparticles (NPs) strongly grafted on defective graphene. These graphene films (thinner than 20 nm) containing Ru NPs nanoplatelets (less than 2 nanomol/cm) are among the most active photocatalysts ever prepared for CO hydrogenation and operate through photoinduced charge separation.
- Published
- 2022
5. Preparation and ESR characterization of polyalkyl-s-indacenyl anion-radicals from polyalkyl-1,5-dilithio-s-indacenes
- Author
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Adams, C., Araneda, J., Morales, C., Chavez, I., Manriquez, J.M., Mac-Leod Carey, D., Katir, N., Castel, A., Rivière, P., Rivière-Baudet, M., Dahrouch, M., and Gatica, N.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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6. From polysubstituted 1,5-dihydro- s-indacene lithium derivatives to polysubstituted hydro- s-indacenyl radicals by a new method involving a single electron transfer from an electron rich olefin
- Author
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Katir, N., Rivière, P., Rivière-Baudet, M., Castel, A., Adams, C., Carey, D. MacLeod, Aguirre-Etcheverry, P., Chavez, I., Manriquez, J.M., Diaz, E., and Dahrouch, M.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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7. Palladium supported on porous chitosan-graphene oxide aerogels as highly effcient catalysts for hydrogen generation from formate
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Anouar, A., Katir, N., El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, García Gómez, Hermenegildo, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Anouar, A., Katir, N., El Kadib, A., Primo, Ana, and García Gómez, Hermenegildo
- Abstract
Adsorption of Pd(NH) in preformed chitosan-graphene oxide (CS-GO) beads and their subsequent reduction with NaBH afford well-dispersed, high dispersion (∼21%) of uniformly sized Pd nanoparticles (∼1.7 nm). The resulting Pd/CS-GO exhibits interesting catalytic activity for hydrogen generation by ammonium formate decomposition. The optimal GO proportion of 7 wt% allows reaching, at 60 °C, a turnover frequency above 2200 h-being outstanding among the highest values reported for this process to date. Interestingly, no formation of CO or CH was detected. The catalyst did not leach, although it underwent gradual deactivation, probably caused by the increase in the Pd average size that became over 3 nm after three uses. Our results are relevant in the context of efficient on-board hydrogen generation from liquid organic hydrogen carriers in transportation.
- Published
- 2019
8. From rational design of organometallic precursors to optimized synthesis of core/shell Ge/GeO2nanoparticles
- Author
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Matioszek, D., primary, Ojo, W.-S., additional, Cornejo, A., additional, Katir, N., additional, El Ezzi, M., additional, Le Troedec, M., additional, Martinez, H., additional, Gornitzka, H., additional, Castel, A., additional, Nayral, C., additional, and Delpech, F., additional
- Published
- 2015
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9. Poly(germaniumpolycarbodiimides)
- Author
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Dahrouch, M., Rivière-Baudet, M., Katir, N., Alvarez, J., Diaz, E., Rivière, P., Castel, A., Chavez, I., and Manriquez, J.M.
- Published
- 2007
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10. New biosurfactants based on germylated fatty compounds
- Author
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Katir, N., primary, El Kadib, A., additional, Castel, A., additional, Rivière, P., additional, and Benmaarouf, Z., additional
- Published
- 2008
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11. Hydrosilylation of unsaturated fatty acid N‐phenyl amides
- Author
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El Kadib, A., primary, Katir, N., additional, Castel, A., additional, Delpech, F., additional, and Rivière, P., additional
- Published
- 2007
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12. From rational design of organometallic precursors to optimized synthesis of core/shell Ge/GeO2 nanoparticles.
- Author
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Matioszek, D., Katir, N., El Ezzi, M., Castel, A., Ojo, W.-S., Cornejo, A., Nayral, C., Delpech, F., Le Troedec, M., Martinez, H., and Gornitzka, H.
- Subjects
- *
GERMANIUM , *NANOPARTICLE synthesis , *CHEMICAL precursors , *GERMANIUM compounds , *ORGANOMETALLIC chemistry , *CRYSTALLOGRAPHY - Abstract
The synthesis of germanium nanoparticles has been carried out, thanks to the design of novel aminoiminate germanium(ii) precursors: (ATI)GeZ (with Z = OMe, NPh2, and ATI = N,N′-diisopropyl-aminotroponiminate) and (Am)2Ge (Am = N,N′-bis(trimethylsilyl)phenyl amidinate). These complexes were fully characterized by spectroscopic techniques as well as single crystal X-ray diffraction. The thermolysis of both complexes yielded NPs which display similar features that are a Ge/GeO2 core/shell structure with a mean diameter close to 5 nm with a narrow size distribution (<15%). Whereas the high temperatures (>300 °C) classically reported in the literature for the preparation of germanium-based NPs were necessary for thermolysis of the complexes (ATI)GeZ, the use of amidinate-based precursors allows the preparation at an unprecedented low temperature (160 °C) for the thermolytic route. As suggested by a mechanistic study, the lower reactivity of (ATI)GeZ (for which the concomitant use of high temperature and acidic reagent is required) was explained in terms of lower ring strain compared to the case of (Am)2Ge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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13. Biodegradable Chitosan-Based Films as an Alternative to Plastic Packaging.
- Author
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Wrońska N, Katir N, Nowak-Lange M, El Kadib A, and Lisowska K
- Abstract
The impact of synthetic packaging on environmental pollution has been observed for years. One of the recent trends of green technology is the development of biomaterials made from food processing waste as an alternative to plastic packaging. Polymers obtained from some polysaccharides, such as chitosan, could be an excellent solution. This study investigated the biodegradability of chitosan-metal oxide films (ZnO, TiO
2 , Fe2 O3 ) and chitosan-modified graphene films (CS-GO-Ag) in a soil environment. We have previously demonstrated that these films have excellent mechanical properties and exhibit antibacterial activity. This study aimed to examine these films' biodegradability and the possibility of their potential use in the packaging industry. The obtained results show that soil microorganisms were able to utilize chitosan films as the source of carbon and nitrogen, thus providing essential evidence about the biodegradability of CS, CS:Zn (20:1; 10:1), and CS:Fe2 O3 (20:1) films. After 6 weeks of incubation, the complete degradation of the CS-Fe2 O3 20:1 sample was noted, while after 8 weeks, CS-ZnO 20:1 and CS-ZnO 10:1 were degraded. This is a very positive result that points to the practical aspect of the biodegradability of such films in soil, where garbage is casually dumped and buried. Once selected, biodegradable films can be used as an alternative to plastic packaging, which contributes to the reduction in pollution in the environment.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. The solvent-free mechano-chemical grinding of a bifunctional P25-graphene oxide adsorbent-photocatalyst and its configuration as porous beads.
- Author
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Zirar FE, Katir N, Qourzal S, Ichou IA, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
Owing to their use in water-cleaning technology, titanium-dioxide-based nanomaterials have dominated the photocatalysis scene, with so-called Degussa (P25) being the most promising under UV light. However, this is not the case under visible light, where it is necessary to combine titanium dioxide with other photosensitising nanomaterials. Unfortunately, most of the strategies aimed in this direction are chemically non-facile, energy-intensive, economically expensive, and not suitable for large-scale production. We herein describe a straightforward solvent-free approach for accessing visible-light-activated titanium-dioxide-based photocatalysts via the mechanochemical grinding of Degussa P25 with a second solid partner. Upon comparing several solid-material benchmarks, P25-graphene oxide is the best combination. The resulting material showed efficient performance for the adsorption and photodegradation of different dye pollutants, namely methylene blue, malachite green, Congo red, and methyl orange. The recorded performance was nearly comparable to that reached using sol-gel materials, with the ultimate advantage of being more sustainable and industrially scalable. The recyclability can be improved through a porous-bead configuration using biomass waste chitosan hydrogel, an approach that can further fulfill the requirement for more sustainable photocatalyst designs., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
- Published
- 2022
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15. Glassy-like Metal Oxide Particles Embedded on Micrometer Thicker Alginate Films as Promising Wound Healing Nanomaterials.
- Author
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Kędzierska M, Hammi N, Kolodziejczyk-Czepas J, Katir N, Bryszewska M, Milowska K, and El Kadib A
- Subjects
- Humans, Oxides pharmacology, Water pharmacology, Wound Healing, Alginates pharmacology, Nanostructures
- Abstract
Micrometer-thicker, biologically responsive nanocomposite films were prepared starting from alginate-metal alkoxide colloidal solution followed by sol-gel chemistry and solvent removal through evaporation-induced assembly. The disclosed approach is straightforward and highly versatile, allowing the entrapment and growth of a set of glassy-like metal oxide within the network of alginate and their shaping as crake-free transparent and flexible films. Immersing these films in aqueous medium triggers alginate solubilization, and affords water-soluble metal oxides wrapped in a biocompatible carbohydrate framework. Biological activity of the nano-composites films was also studied including their hemolytic activity, methemoglobin, prothrombin, and thrombine time. The effect of the films on fibroblasts and keratinocytes of human skin was also investigated with a special emphasis on the role played by the incorporated metal oxide. This comparative study sheds light on the crucial biological response of the ceramic phase embedded inside of the films, with titanium dioxide being the most promising for wound healing purposes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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16. Insight into Factors Influencing Wound Healing Using Phosphorylated Cellulose-Filled-Chitosan Nanocomposite Films.
- Author
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Kędzierska M, Blilid S, Miłowska K, Kołodziejczyk-Czepas J, Katir N, Lahcini M, El Kadib A, and Bryszewska M
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Cell Movement, Cellulose pharmacology, Fibroblasts physiology, Humans, Keratinocytes physiology, Phosphorylation, Wound Healing, Cellulose chemistry, Chitosan, Fibroblasts drug effects, Keratinocytes drug effects, Nanocomposites chemistry
- Abstract
Marine polysaccharides are believed to be promising wound-dressing nanomaterials because of their biocompatibility, antibacterial and hemostatic activity, and ability to easily shape into transparent films, hydrogels, and porous foams that can provide a moist micro-environment and adsorb exudates. Current efforts are firmly focused on the preparation of novel polysaccharide-derived nanomaterials functionalized with chemical objects to meet the mechanical and biological requirements of ideal wound healing systems. In this contribution, we investigated the characteristics of six different cellulose-filled chitosan transparent films as potential factors that could help to accelerate wound healing. Both microcrystalline and nano-sized cellulose, as well as native and phosphorylated cellulose, were used as fillers to simultaneously elucidate the roles of size and functionalization. The assessment of their influences on hemostatic properties indicated that the tested nanocomposites shorten clotting times by affecting both the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways of the blood coagulation system. We also showed that all biocomposites have antioxidant capacity. Moreover, the cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of the materials against two cell lines, human BJ fibroblasts and human KERTr keratinocytes, was investigated. The nature of the cellulose used as a filler was found to influence their cytotoxicity at a relatively low level. Potential mechanisms of cytotoxicity were also investigated; only one (phosphorylated microcellulose-filled chitosan films) of the compounds tested produced reactive oxygen species (ROS) to a small extent, and some films reduced the level of ROS, probably due to their antioxidant properties. The transmembrane mitochondrial potential was very slightly lowered. These biocompatible films showed no genotoxicity, and very importantly for wound healing, most of them significantly accelerated migration of both fibroblasts and keratinocytes.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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17. Growth of binary anatase-rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P-O-Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst.
- Author
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Zirar FE, Anouar A, Katir N, Ichou IA, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
Titanium dioxide is an ubiquitous photocatalyst in water-cleaning technologies, being presently the most promising tools to resolve the global issue of sewage treatment. In this framework, titanium dioxide-graphene nanocomposites are discussed as promising visible-light activated photocatalysts but little is hitherto known about the surface and interface chemistry bridging the metal oxide and carbon phases. In an attempt to spotlight this overlooked issue, we herein designed two different hybrid nanocomposites through covalent grafting and growth of titanium dioxide clusters on graphene oxide and on phosphorylated graphene oxide, which affords GO@TiO
2 and PGO@TiO2 , respectively. While anatase could be selectively harvested on the surface of GO@TiO2 , biphasic anatase-rutile nucleates could be obtained on PGO@TiO2 . Thermal annealing treatments improve the metal oxide crystallization and further remove oxygenated groups from the surface of graphene. The interfacial stability of these photocatalysts was also investigated under irradiation, with the graphene support being sensitive to the proximal presence of titanium dioxide. The resulting nanocomposites were also assessed for methylene blue removal through adsorption and photocatalysis. Regardless of their composition, superior photoactivity was noticed for the nanocomposites compared to commercially available degussa that display marginal visible-light photoactivity (11% removal). Within our study, PGO@TiO2 -500 stands as the most active catalyst, allowing nearly quantitative removal of the pollutant from water. The superior performance of PGO@TiO2 -500 can be explained by the highest stability reached through P-O-Ti bonding, its improved crystallinity, and the reduction of the graphene surface during thermal treatment. On a whole, this study provides a blueprint for comparing semiconducting metal oxide grown on tuneable surface-interfacial graphene environments and highlights the utility of surface-engineering graphene sheets to access efficient visible-light oxidation photocatalysts., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)- Published
- 2021
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18. Antimicrobial Effect of Chitosan Films on Food Spoilage Bacteria.
- Author
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Wrońska N, Katir N, Miłowska K, Hammi N, Nowak M, Kędzierska M, Anouar A, Zawadzka K, Bryszewska M, El Kadib A, and Lisowska K
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacterial Outer Membrane drug effects, Cell Membrane Permeability drug effects, Metals chemistry, Polymers, Anti-Infective Agents chemistry, Anti-Infective Agents pharmacology, Biocompatible Materials, Chitosan chemistry, Food Microbiology, Food Packaging, Membranes, Artificial
- Abstract
Synthetic materials commonly used in the packaging industry generate a considerable amount of waste each year. Chitosan is a promising feedstock for the production of functional biomaterials. From a biological point of view, chitosan is very attractive for food packaging. The purposes of this study were to evaluate the antibacterial activity of a set of chitosan-metal oxide films and different chitosan-modified graphene (oxide) films against two foodborne pathogens: Campylobacter jejuni ATCC 33560 and Listeria monocytogenes 19115. Moreover, we wanted to check whether the incorporation of antimicrobial constituents such as TiO
2 , ZnO, Fe2 O3 , Ag, and graphene oxide (GO) into the polymer matrices can improve the antibacterial properties of these nanocomposite films. Finally, this research helps elucidate the interactions of these materials with eukaryotic cells. All chitosan-metal oxide films and chitosan-modified graphene (oxide) films displayed improved antibacterial ( C. jejuni ATCC 33560 and L. monocytogenes 19115) properties compared to native chitosan films. The CS-ZnO films had excellent antibacterial activity towards L. monocytogenes (90% growth inhibition). Moreover, graphene-based chitosan films caused high inhibition of both tested strains. Chitosan films with graphene (GO, GOP, GOP-HMDS, rGO, GO-HMDS, rGOP), titanium dioxide (CS-TiO2 20:1a, CS-TiO2 20:1b, CS-TiO2 2:1, CS-TiO2 1:1a, CS-TiO2 1:1b) and zinc oxide (CS-ZnO 20:1a, CS-ZnO 20:1b) may be considered as a safe, non-cytotoxic packaging materials in the future.- Published
- 2021
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19. Chitosan-Functionalized Graphene Nanocomposite Films: Interfacial Interplay and Biological Activity.
- Author
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Wrońska N, Anouar A, El Achaby M, Zawadzka K, Kędzierska M, Miłowska K, Katir N, Draoui K, Różalska S, Piwoński I, Bryszewska M, El Kadib A, and Lisowska K
- Abstract
Graphene oxide ( GO ) has recently captured tremendous attention, but only few functionalized graphene derivatives were used as fillers, and insightful studies dealing with the thermal, mechanical, and biological effects of graphene surface functionalization are currently missing in the literature. Herein, reduced graphene oxide ( rGO ), phosphorylated graphene oxide ( PGO ), and trimethylsilylated graphene oxide ( SiMe
3 GO ) were prepared by the post-modification of GO . The electrostatic interactions of these fillers with chitosan afforded colloidal solutions that provide, after water evaporation, transparent and flexible chitosan-modified graphene films. All reinforced chitosan-graphene films displayed improved mechanical, thermal, and antibacterial ( S. aureus , E. coli ) properties compared to native chitosan films. Hemolysis, intracellular catalase activity, and hemoglobin oxidation were also observed for these materials. This study shows that graphene functionalization provides a handle for tuning the properties of graphene-reinforced nanocomposite films and customizing their functionalities.- Published
- 2020
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20. Aldehyde-conjugated chitosan-graphene oxide glucodynamers: Ternary cooperative assembly and controlled chemical release.
- Author
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Chabbi J, Aqil A, Katir N, Vertruyen B, Jerôme C, Lahcini M, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
Simultaneous condensation of aromatic aldehydes (Ar
x CHO; x = 1-4) on chitosan biopolymer (CS) affords, after water-evaporation, structurally-conjugated aryl-functionalized CS-Arx -f films. Similarly, cooperative assembly of two-dimensional nanometric graphene oxide (GO), aromatic aldehyde and chitosan provides transparent, flexible and crack-free aldehyde-functionalized, ternary-reinforced CS-Arx -GO-f nanocomposite films. Homogenous films were obtained using ortho-hydroxybenzaldehyde Ar1 while the para-hydroxybenzaldehyde Ar4 was prone to packing inside. Textural and mechanical properties were investigated and expectedly, significant improvement was found for CS-Ar1 -GO-f because of the great dispersion of the aromatic and the presence of the filler. The sensitivity of unsaturated CN imine bond to hydrolysis was explored for triggering controlled release of aromatics from the as-prepared films. All of them were found to induce a time-dependent aromatic release. It has been moreover observed that the release was significantly delayed in CS-Arx -GO-f compared to CS-Arx -f, a fact attributed to the interplay of the ring with the basal and edges of graphene oxide, through π-π stacking and additional hydrogen bonding interactions. This finding shows that beyond the conventional wisdom using fillers for improving thermal and mechanical properties, the tiny carbon sheets can act as a regulator for aldehyde release, thereby providing a way for more controlled chemical delivery from confined nanocomposites., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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21. Palladium Supported on Porous Chitosan-Graphene Oxide Aerogels as Highly Efficient Catalysts for Hydrogen Generation from Formate.
- Author
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Anouar A, Katir N, El Kadib A, Primo A, and García H
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Catalysis, Chitosan chemistry, Nanoparticles chemistry, Porosity, Formates chemistry, Graphite chemistry, Hydrogen chemistry, Palladium chemistry
- Abstract
Adsorption of Pd(NH
3 )4 2+ in preformed chitosan-graphene oxide (CS-GO) beads and their subsequent reduction with NaBH4 afford well-dispersed, high dispersion (~21%) of uniformly sized Pd nanoparticles (~1.7 nm). The resulting Pd/CS-GO exhibits interesting catalytic activity for hydrogen generation by ammonium formate decomposition. The optimal GO proportion of 7 wt% allows reaching, at 60 °C, a turnover frequency above 2200 h-1 -being outstanding among the highest values reported for this process to date. Interestingly, no formation of CO or CH4 was detected. The catalyst did not leach, although it underwent gradual deactivation, probably caused by the increase in the Pd average size that became over 3 nm after three uses. Our results are relevant in the context of efficient on-board hydrogen generation from liquid organic hydrogen carriers in transportation.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Supramolecular Chemistry-Driven Preparation of Nanostructured, Transformable, and Biologically Active Chitosan-Clustered Single, Binary, and Ternary Metal Oxide Bioplastics.
- Author
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Hammi N, Wrońska N, Katir N, Lisowska K, Marcotte N, Cacciaguerra T, Bryszewska M, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
Aside from their economical cost and resource depletion, petroleum-based plastics generate annually a substantial amount of waste with a negative and extremely alarming impact on the environment and public health. Consequently, rising interest was devoted to search for biobased materials to find sustainable alternatives. Herein, we report a new and straightforward method to incorporate endogenous nano-objects (exemplified herein by metal oxide clusters) within polysaccharide-based films. Supramolecular chemistry based on polysaccharide self-assembly associated with the sol-gel polymerization allowed converting soluble chitosan and metal alkoxide precursors to nanostructured chitosan-clustered metal oxide films. A broad range of discrete single, binary, and ternary mixed metal oxides was successfully incorporated in the resulting bioplastics. The multifaceted use of these films was demonstrated by transforming them under gentle thermal treatment to partially oxidized chitosan-metal oxide materials or by disintegrating them in aqueous conditions to yield stable, water-dispersed chitosan-coated-metal oxide nanoparticles. The utility of these functional films was demonstrated through their use as antimicrobial agents, where significant improvement for inhibiting growth of positive and negative bacteria was observed compared to native, nonmodified chitosan films.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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23. Interfacial complexation driven three-dimensional assembly of cationic phosphorus dendrimers and graphene oxide sheets.
- Author
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Katir N, Benayad A, Rouchon D, Marcotte N, El Brahmi N, Majoral JP, Bousmina M, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
High content nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus heteroatoms assembled in tree-like dendrimers (DG
n ) are confined within the galleries of two-dimensional graphene oxide (GO). The presence of the ternary diethyl- N -ethyl-ammonium groups on the dendrimer peripheries ensures the exfoliation of graphene sheets thereby affording interfacially bridged, three-dimensional heteroatom-enriched graphene-based hybrid nanostructures (DGn -GO). Dendrimer generation (from 1 to 4) that reflects the bulkiness of these conceived nano-trees impacts increasingly the degree of dispersion-exfoliation and sheet desordering. The long-term stability of these aqueous suspensions associated with their handling flexibility allows uniform accommodation of the resulting hybrid materials as flame-retardants in bioplastics., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)- Published
- 2018
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24. Aldehyde-functionalized chitosan-montmorillonite films as dynamically-assembled, switchable-chemical release bioplastics.
- Author
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Chabbi J, Jennah O, Katir N, Lahcini M, Bousmina M, and El Kadib A
- Subjects
- Aldehydes chemistry, Biodegradable Plastics chemical synthesis, Drug Liberation, Nanoparticles chemistry, Bentonite chemistry, Biocompatible Materials chemical synthesis, Chitosan analogs & derivatives, Drug Carriers chemical synthesis
- Abstract
Temporal release of synergistic and/or complementary chemicals (e.g.: drugs) is recognized as extremely challenging because of their frequently intertwined kinetic delivery and presently, straightforward concepts enabling to circumvent this bottleneck are missing in the open literature. In this framework, we report herein on aldehyde-functionalized, transparent and flexible chitosan-montmorillonite hybrid films that act as a new generation of eco-friendly, controlled-chemical release bioplastics. These dynamically-assembled nanomaterials are designed by a ternary assembly from biowaste derived chitin biopolymer, aromatic aldehydes and layered clay nanoparticles. On the basis of their geometrical and conformational properties, the oxygenated groups on the grafted aromatics interact preferentially with either the base Schiff belonging to the carbohydrate (via intramolecular CNHO-Ar known as "imine clip") or with the hydroxyl groups belonging to the clay surface (via intermolecular Si-OHO-Ar). The exfoliated clay nanoparticles within the carbohydrate polymer enables either accelerating or slowing down of the imine (CN) hydrolysis depending on the interaction of the conjugated aromatics. This provides the driving force for fine tuning host-guest interactions at the molecular level and constitutes an entry toward subtle discrimination of different chemicals (e.g. complementary fertilizers, synergistic drugs) during their sequential release., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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25. Ternary cooperative assembly--polymeric condensation of photoactive viologen, phosphonate-terminated dendrimers and crystalline anatase nanoparticles.
- Author
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Katir N, Brahmi Y, Majoral JP, Bousmina M, and El Kadib A
- Subjects
- Gold chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Polymerization, Porosity, Dendrimers chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Organophosphonates chemistry, Titanium chemistry, Viologens chemistry
- Abstract
Photoactive viologen fragments were covalently embedded within the material framework during the self-assembly and sol-gel polymerisation of phosphonate-terminated dendrimers and soluble titanium-oxo-species. The resulting porous anisotropic phosphonate-bridged-crystalline anatase materials serve as new hosts to disperse and stabilize small gold nanoparticles.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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26. Organophosphonate bridged anatase mesocrystals: low temperature crystallization, thermal growth and hydrogen photo-evolution.
- Author
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Brahmi Y, Katir N, Agullo JA, Primo A, Bousmina M, Pierre Majoral J, Garcia H, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
The sol-gel co-condensation of organo-phosphonates to titanium alkoxides enables access to novel organic-inorganic hybrids based on phosphonate-bridged titanium dioxide. In this contribution, we bring new perspectives to the long established sol-gel mineralization of titanium alkoxide species, by harnessing the virtues of the well-designed phosphonate-terminated phosphorus dendrimers as reactive amphiphilic nanoreactor, confined medium and cross-linked template to generate discrete crystalline anatase nanoparticles at low temperature (T = 60 °C). An accurate investigation on several parameters (dendrimer generation, dendrimer-to-titanium alkoxide ratio, precursor reactivity, temperature, solvent nature, salt effect) allows a correlation between the network condensation, the opening porous framework and the crystalline phase formation. The evolution of the dendrimer skeleton upon heat treatment has been deeply monitored by means of (31)P NMR, XPS and Raman spectroscopy. Increasing the heteroatom content within a titania network provides the driving force for enhancing their photocatalytic water splitting ability for hydrogen production.
- Published
- 2015
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27. Biological Activity of Mesoporous Dendrimer-Coated Titanium Dioxide: Insight on the Role of the Surface-Interface Composition and the Framework Crystallinity.
- Author
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Milowska K, Rybczyńska A, Mosiolek J, Durdyn J, Szewczyk EM, Katir N, Brahmi Y, Majoral JP, Bousmina M, Bryszewska M, and El Kadib A
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Infective Agents chemistry, Anti-Infective Agents pharmacology, CHO Cells, Candida albicans drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Erythrocytes cytology, Erythrocytes metabolism, Gram-Negative Bacteria, Gram-Positive Bacteria drug effects, Hemolysis drug effects, Humans, Nanomedicine, Nanostructures toxicity, Porosity, Scattering, Small Angle, Surface Properties, X-Ray Diffraction, Dendrimers chemistry, Nanostructures chemistry, Titanium chemistry
- Abstract
Hitherto, the field of nanomedicine has been overwhelmingly dominated by the use of mesoporous organosilicas compared to their metal oxide congeners. Despite their remarkable reactivity, titanium oxide-based materials have been seldom evaluated and little knowledge has been gained with respect to their "structure-biological activity" relationship. Herein, a fruitful association of phosphorus dendrimers (both "ammonium-terminated" and "phosphonate-terminated") and titanium dioxide has been performed by means of the sol-gel process, resulting in mesoporous dendrimer-coated nanosized crystalline titanium dioxide. A similar organo-coating has been reproduced using single branch-mimicking dendrimers that allow isolation of an amorphous titanium dioxide. The impact of these materials on red blood cells was evaluated by studying cell hemolysis. Next, their cytotoxicity toward B14 Chinese fibroblasts and their antimicrobial activity were also investigated. Based on their variants (cationic versus anionic terminal groups and amorphous versus crystalline titanium dioxide phase), better understanding of the role of the surface-interface composition and the nature of the framework has been gained. No noticeable discrimination was observed for amorphous and crystalline material. In contrast, hemolysis and cytotoxicity were found to be sensitive to the nature of the interface composition, with the ammonium-terminated dendrimer-coated titanium dioxide being the most hemolytic and cytotoxic material. This surface-functionalization opens the door for creating a new synergistic machineries mechanism at the cellular level and seems promising for tailoring the biological activity of nanosized organic-inorganic hybrid materials.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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28. Synthesis of onion-peel nanodendritic structures with sequential functional phosphorus diversity.
- Author
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Katir N, El Brahmi N, El Kadib A, Mignani S, Caminade AM, Bousmina M, and Majoral JP
- Abstract
The preparation of novel families of phosphorus-based macromolecular architectures called "onion peel" phosphorus nanodendritic systems is reported. This construct is based on the versatility of methods of synthesis using several building blocks and on the capability of these systems to undergo regioselective reactions within the cascade structure. Sustainable metal-free routes such as the Staudinger reaction or Schiff-base condensation, involving only water and nitrogen as byproducts, allow access to several dendritic macromolecules bearing up to seven different phosphorus units in their backbone, each of them featuring specific reactivity. The presence of the highly aurophilic P=N-P=S fragment enables selective ligation of Au(I) within the dendritic framework., (© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2015
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29. Haemolytic activity and cellular toxicity of SBA-15-type silicas: elucidating the role of the mesostructure, surface functionality and linker length.
- Author
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Ferenc M, Katir N, Miłowska K, Bousmina M, Majoral JP, Bryszewska M, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
In this contribution, amorphous silica (a-SiO
2 ), native SBA-15 silica as well as four functional SBA-15-type silicates modified with aminopropyl (SBA-NH2 ), mercaptopropyl (SBA-SH), ethylcarboxylic (SBA-COOH) and undecenoic acid (SBA-FA-COOH) were prepared by the co-condensation route under similar self-assembly and sol-gel conditions. Next, the impact of these materials on red blood cells was evaluated by studying cell haemolysis and haemoglobin adsorption. Moreover, the influence of the presence of human serum albumin (HSA) on erythrocyte haemolysis and cytotoxicity toward B14 Chinese fibroblasts were investigated. Based on these variants, the role of the mesostructure, the nature of the functional group located on the silica surface and the influence of the linker length have been elucidated.- Published
- 2015
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30. Oleochemical-tethered SBA-15-type silicates with tunable nanoscopic order, carboxylic surface, and hydrophobic framework: cellular toxicity, hemolysis, and antibacterial activity.
- Author
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Pędziwiatr-Werbicka E, Miłowska K, Podlas M, Marcinkowska M, Ferenc M, Brahmi Y, Katir N, Majoral JP, Felczak A, Boruszewska A, Lisowska K, Bryszewska M, and El Kadib A
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Survival drug effects, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Fibroblasts cytology, Fibroblasts drug effects, Hemolysis drug effects, Humans, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Poloxalene pharmacology, Silanes pharmacology, Surface Properties, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Poloxalene chemistry, Silanes chemistry, Silicon Dioxide chemistry, Silicon Dioxide pharmacology
- Abstract
Novel silicates were prepared by using silylated natural fatty acids (derived from triglyceride renewable oils) as co-condensing reagents in presence of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) and the triblock copolymer, pluronic P123, as a structure directing agent. A series of carboxylic acid functionalized SBA-15-type mesoporous silicates were obtained with tunable nanoscopic order and reactive functional groups that allow the conjugation of amino probes by peptide coupling. Photophysical studies of the covalently linked aminopyrene substantiated that the internal framework of these materials have pronounced hydrophobicity. Moreover, phase separation that can emanate from the bulkiness of the starting fatty silanes has been ruled out owing to the absence of excimers after aminopyrene grafting. The hemotoxicity, cytotoxicity, and antimicrobial activity of these novel silicates were then evaluated. Without discrimination, the functionalized silicates show a significant decrease of red blood cell hemolysis as compared to bare SBA-15-silica material. Within the modified silicate series, germanium-free mesoporous silicates induce only a slight decrease in cell viability and, more interestingly, they exhibit negligible hemolytic effect. Moreover, increasing their concentration in the medium reduces the concentration of released hemoglobin as a result of Hb adsorption. Promising antimicrobial properties were also observed for these silicates with a slight dependency on whether phenylgermanium fragments were present within the silicate framework., (© 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2014
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31. Viologen-based dendritic macromolecular asterisks: synthesis and interplay with gold nanoparticles.
- Author
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Katir N, El Kadib A, Collière V, Majoral JP, and Bousmina M
- Abstract
The viologen-skeleton reacts with a hydrazine-terminated cyclotriphosphazene core to provide novel dendritic macromolecular asterisks that efficiently exchange, deliver and stabilize gold nanoparticles for up to eight months.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
32. Promising low-toxicity of viologen-phosphorus dendrimers against embryonic mouse hippocampal cells.
- Author
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Lazniewska J, Janaszewska A, Miłowska K, Caminade AM, Mignani S, Katir N, El Kadib A, Bryszewska M, Majoral JP, Gabryelak T, and Klajnert-Maculewicz B
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Catalase metabolism, Cell Cycle Checkpoints, Cell Line, Cell Shape drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Glutathione metabolism, Hippocampus cytology, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Mice, Neurons drug effects, Neurons physiology, Organophosphonates toxicity, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Dendrimers toxicity, Viologens toxicity
- Abstract
A new class of viologen-phosphorus dendrimers (VPDs) has been recently shown to possess the ability to inhibit neurodegenerative processes in vitro. Nevertheless, in the Central Nervous Systems domain, there is little information on their impact on cell functions, especially on neuronal cells. In this work, we examined the influence of two VPD (VPD1 and VPD3) of zero generation (G0) on murine hippocampal cell line (named mHippoE-18). Extended analyses of cell responses to these nanomolecules comprised cytotoxicity test, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation studies, mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) assay, cell death detection, cell morphology assessment, cell cycle studies, as well as measurements of catalase (CAT) activity and glutathione (GSH) level. The results indicate that VPD1 is more toxic than VPD3. However, these two tested dendrimers did not cause a strong cellular response, and induced a low level of apoptosis. Interestingly, VPD1 and VPD3 treatment led to a small decline in ROS level compared to untreated cells, which correlated with slightly increased catalase activity. This result indicates that the VPDs can indirectly lower the level of ROS in cells. Summarising, low-cytotoxicity on mHippoE-18 cells together with their ability to quench ROS, make the VPDs very promising nanodevices for future applications in the biomedical field as nanocarriers and/or drugs per se.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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33. Viologen-phosphorus dendrimers exhibit minor toxicity against a murine neuroblastoma cell line.
- Author
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Lazniewska J, Milowska K, Katir N, El Kadib A, Bryszewska M, Majoral JP, and Gabryelak T
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival drug effects, Dendrimers chemistry, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Flow Cytometry, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Mice, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Microscopy, Phase-Contrast, Mitochondria drug effects, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondria physiology, Molecular Structure, Necrosis chemically induced, Neuroblastoma metabolism, Neuroblastoma pathology, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Apoptosis drug effects, Dendrimers toxicity, Phosphorus chemistry, Viologens chemistry
- Abstract
Dendrimers containing viologen (derivatives of 4,4'-bipyridyl) units in their structure have been demonstrated to exhibit antiviral activity against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). It has also recently been revealed that novel dendrimers with both viologen units and phosphorus groups in their structure show different antimicrobial, cytotoxic and hemotoxic properties, and have the ability to influence the activity of cholinesterases and to inhibit α-synuclein fibrillation. Since the influence of viologen-phosphorus structures on basic cellular processes had not been investigated, we examined the impact of such macromolecules on the murine neuroblastoma cell line (N2a). We selected three water-soluble viologen-phosphorus (VPD) dendrimers, which differ in their core structure, number of viologen units and number and type of surface groups, and analyzed several aspects of the cellular response. These included cell viability, generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), alterations in mitochondrial activity, morphological modifications, and the induction of apoptosis and necrosis. The MTT assay results suggest that all of the tested dendrimers are only slightly cytotoxic. Although some changes in ROS formation and mitochondrial function were detected, the three compounds did not induce apoptosis or necrosis. In light of these results, we can assume that the tested VPD are relatively safe for mouse neuroblastoma cells. Although more research on their safety is needed, VPD seem to be promising nanoparticles for further biomedical investigation.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Phosphorus-based fatty acid methyl esters.
- Author
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Katir N, El Kadib A, and Castel A
- Subjects
- Esters, Hydrolysis, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Phosphorylation, Fatty Acids chemistry, Phosphorus chemistry
- Abstract
With the aim of designing novel transformable fatty acid diesters, various strategies for introducing phosphorus arms to the fatty backbone have been examined. While lithiated phosphine reacts classically to brominated fatty esters to afford the mono-addition product, the synthesis of phosphorylated diesters was found to be difficult, a fact related to the bulkiness of fatty acids and phosphine reagents. A base-induced dehydrochlorination reaction using ArPCl2 and hydroxy-terminated fatty esters resulted in metastable diester for which hydrolytic cleavage undergo phosphine oxidation and expulsion of one fatty chain. Alternatively, ArPOCl2 alleviates this drawback and provides stable, phosphorylated fatty acid diesters., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Low temperature synthesis of ordered mesoporous stable anatase nanocrystals: the phosphorus dendrimer approach.
- Author
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Brahmi Y, Katir N, Ianchuk M, Collière V, Essassi el M, Ouali A, Caminade AM, Bousmina M, Majoral JP, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
The scarcity of low temperature syntheses of anatase nanocrystals prompted us to explore the use of surface-reactive fourth generation phosphorus-dendrimers as molds to control the nucleation and growth of titanium-oxo-species during the sol-gel mineralization process. Unexpectedly, the dendritic medium provides at low temperature, discrete anatase nanocrystals (4.8 to 5.2 nm in size), in marked contrast to the routinely obtained amorphous titanium dioxide phase under standard conditions. Upon thermal treatment, heteroatom migration from the branches to the nanoparticle surface and the ring opening polymerization of the cyclophosphazene core provide stable, interpenetrating mesoporous polyphosphazene-anatase hybrid materials (-P[double bond, length as m-dash]N-)n-TiO2. The steric hindrance of the dendritic skeleton, the passivation of the anatase surface by heteroatoms and the ring opening of the core limit the crystal growth of anatase to 7.4 nm and prevent, up to 800 °C, the commonly observed anatase-to-rutile phase transformation. Performing this mineralization in the presence of similar surface-reactive but non-dendritic skeletons (referred to as branch-mimicking dendrimers) failed to generate crystalline anatase and to efficiently limit the crystal growth, bringing thus clear evidence of the virtues of phosphorus dendrimers in the design of novel nanostructured materials.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Viologen-Phosphorus Dendrimers Inhibit α-Synuclein Fibrillation.
- Author
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Milowska K, Grochowina J, Katir N, El Kadib A, Majoral JP, Bryszewska M, and Gabryelak T
- Subjects
- Circular Dichroism, Humans, Dendrimers chemistry, Phosphorus chemistry, Viologens chemistry, alpha-Synuclein chemistry
- Abstract
Inhibition of α-synuclein (ASN) fibril formation is a potential therapeutic strategy in Parkinson's disease and other synucleinopathies. The aim of this study was to examine the role of viologen-phosphorus dendrimers in the α-synuclein fibrillation process and to assess the structural changes in α-synuclein under the influence of dendrimers. ASN interactions with phosphonate and pegylated surface-reactive viologen-phosphorus dendrimers were examined by measuring the zeta potential, which allowed determining the number of dendrimer molecules that bind to the ASN molecule. The fibrillation kinetics and the structural changes were examined using ThT fluorescence and CD spectroscopy. Depending on the concentration of the used dendrimer and the nature of the reactive groups located on the surface, ASN fibrillation kinetics can be significantly reduced, and even, in the specific case of phosphonate dendrimers, the fibrillation can be totally inhibited at low concentrations. The presented results indicate that viologen-phosphorus dendrimers are able to inhibit ASN fibril formation and may be used as fibrillar regulating agents in neurodegenerative disorders.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Effect of viologen-phosphorus dendrimers on acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase activities.
- Author
-
Ciepluch K, Weber M, Katir N, Caminade AM, El Kadib A, Klajnert B, Majoral JP, and Bryszewska M
- Subjects
- Circular Dichroism, Dendrimers chemistry, Erythrocyte Membrane drug effects, Erythrocyte Membrane enzymology, Fluorescence, Humans, Phosphorus chemistry, Static Electricity, Viologens chemistry, Acetylcholinesterase metabolism, Butyrylcholinesterase metabolism, Dendrimers pharmacology, Phosphorus pharmacology, Viologens pharmacology
- Abstract
The inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) is the first step in checking whether new compounds can be considered as drugs for treating neurodegenerative diseases. The effect of viologen-phosphorus dendrimers on AChE and BChE activities was studied. The results show that the effects on the cholinesterase activities depend on dendrimer type and size. Viologen dendrimers can interact with the enzymes in two ways: they can bind either to a peripheral site of the enzyme or to amino acids located near the active site, inhibiting catalysis by both cholinesterases. All tested non-toxic viologen-phosphorus dendrimers inhibited the activities of both cholinesterases, showing their potential as new drugs for treating neurodegenerative diseases., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mesostructured fatty acid-tethered silicas: sustaining the order by co-templating with bulky precursors.
- Author
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El Kadib A, Katir N, Finiels A, Castel A, Marcotte N, Molvinger K, Biolley C, Gaveau P, Bousmina M, and Brunel D
- Abstract
The co-condensation of functional alkoxysilanes with tetraethoxysilane in the presence of a structure directing agent under sol-gel process chemistry is a common way to access functional organosilica with an ordered mesostructure. In this report, bulky silylated fatty acid methyl esters were used both as co-templating bio-molecules and functionalizing agents in the process of supra-molecular silica mineralization. The highest structural regularity in terms of pore size distribution and channel size homogeneity was observed for carboxy-tethered silica possessing SBA-15-type architecture due to an enhanced fatty acid precursor-surfactant interaction. The carboxylic surface embedded within the hydrophobic environment of the fatty compounds confers to these materials interesting reactive-surface properties with promising applications as drug-delivery systems and bio-catalytic nanoreactors.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Biological properties of new viologen-phosphorus dendrimers.
- Author
-
Ciepluch K, Katir N, El Kadib A, Felczak A, Zawadzka K, Weber M, Klajnert B, Lisowska K, Caminade AM, Bousmina M, Bryszewska M, and Majoral JP
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Antifungal Agents adverse effects, Antifungal Agents chemistry, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Dendrimers adverse effects, Dendrimers pharmacology, Erythrocytes drug effects, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Molecular Structure, Dendrimers chemistry, Phosphorus chemistry, Viologens chemistry
- Abstract
Some biological properties of eight dendrimers incorporating both phosphorus linkages and viologen units within their cascade structure or at the periphery were investigated for the first time. In particular cytotoxicity, hemotoxicity, and antimicrobial and antifungal activity of these new macromolecules were examined. Even if for example all these species exhibited good antimicrobial properties, it was demonstrated that their behavior strongly depends on several parameters as their size and molecular weight, the number of viologen units and the nature of the terminal groups.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Hierarchically porous nanostructures through phosphonate-metal alkoxide condensation and growth using functionalized dendrimeric building blocks.
- Author
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Brahmi Y, Katir N, Hameau A, Essoumhi A, Essassi el M, Caminade AM, Bousmina M, Majoral JP, and El Kadib A
- Abstract
Controlled titanium alkoxide mineralization in the presence of phosphonated, dendrimeric nano-building blocks provides a new family of hierarchically porous dendrimer-bridged titanium dioxide materials., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2011)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Stable N-heterocyclic carbene complexes of hypermetallyl germanium(II) and tin(II) compounds.
- Author
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Katir N, Matioszek D, Ladeira S, Escudié J, and Castel A
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Amphiphilic polyesters derived from silylated and germylated fatty compounds.
- Author
-
Katir N, El Kadib A, Dahrouch M, Castel A, Gatica N, Benmaarouf Z, and Riviere P
- Subjects
- Fatty Acids, Unsaturated chemistry, Glycols chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Surface-Active Agents chemistry, Germanium chemistry, Polyesters chemical synthesis, Polyesters chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis, Polymers chemistry, Siloxanes chemistry, Surface-Active Agents chemical synthesis
- Abstract
New classes of amphiphilic polyesters were prepared from metallated (Si, Ge) fatty methyl ester (FAME) precursors and poly(tetramethylene oxide) glycol. Hydrosilylation of 10-undecenoic methyl ester by tetramethyldisiloxane occurred at 80 degrees C in the presence of Karstedt's catalyst, and hydrogermylation of the same FAME derivative was obtained at the same temperature under radical AIBN initiation. These diester precursors, obtained in high yields (approximately 90%), reacted with poly(tetramethylene oxide) glycol under free solvent to give silicon polymers or germanium oligomers. These condensed materials display both the characteristic of organic-inorganic hybrid materials and those of amphiphilic polymers. The nature of organometallic fragment (hydrophobicity of tetramethyldisiloxy and sterical hindrance of diphenylgermyl) was shown to influence the chemical reactivity of the polymerizable monomers and the physical properties of the resulting copolymers. The amphiphilicity of these materials provides a driving force for the formation of small objects (approximately 1 nm), making them very attractive as hybrid nanocontainers.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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