13 results on '"Schilt Y"'
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2. Thermal Doping by Vacancy Formation in Copper Sulfide Nanocrystal Arrays
- Author
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Bekenstein, Y., primary, Vinokurov, K., additional, Keren-Zur, S., additional, Hadar, I., additional, Schilt, Y., additional, Raviv, U., additional, Millo, O., additional, and Banin, U., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Thermal Doping by Vacancy Formation in Copper SulfideNanocrystal Arrays.
- Author
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Bekenstein, Y., Vinokurov, K., Keren-Zur, S., Hadar, I., Schilt, Y., Raviv, U., Millo, O., and Banin, U.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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4. Anisotropic membrane with high proton conductivity sustaining upon dehydration.
- Author
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Li J, Singh JP, Neklyudov V, Stolov M, Yuan Z, Schilt Y, Raviv U, Dekel DR, and Freger V
- Abstract
In fuel cells and electrolyzers, suboptimal proton conductivity and its dramatic drop at low humidity remain major drawbacks in proton exchange membranes (PEMs), including current benchmark Nafion. Sustained through-plane (TP) alignment of nanochannels was proposed as a remedy but proved challenging. We report an anisotropic composite PEM, mimicking the water-conductive composite structure of bamboo that meets this challenge. Micro- and nanoscale alignment of conductive pathways is achieved by in-plane thermal compression of a mat composed of co-electrospun Nafion and poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) nanofibers stabilizing the alignment. This translates to pronounced TP-enhanced proton conductivity, twice that of pure Nafion at high humidity, 13 times larger at low humidity, and 10 times larger water diffusivity. This remarkable improvement is elucidated by molecular dynamics simulations, which indicate that stronger nanochannels alignment upon dehydration compensates for reduced water content. The presented approach paves the way to overcoming the major drawbacks of ionomers and advancing the development of next-generation membranes for energy applications.
- Published
- 2024
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5. Insight into structural biophysics from solution X-ray scattering.
- Author
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Raviv U, Asor R, Shemesh A, Ginsburg A, Ben-Nun T, Schilt Y, Levartovsky Y, and Ringel I
- Subjects
- X-Ray Diffraction, X-Rays, Scattering, Small Angle, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
The current challenges of structural biophysics include determining the structure of large self-assembled complexes, resolving the structure of ensembles of complex structures and their mass fraction, and unraveling the dynamic pathways and mechanisms leading to the formation of complex structures from their subunits. Modern synchrotron solution X-ray scattering data enable simultaneous high-spatial and high-temporal structural data required to address the current challenges of structural biophysics. These data are complementary to crystallography, NMR, and cryo-TEM data. However, the analysis of solution scattering data is challenging; hence many different analysis tools, listed in the SAS Portal (http://smallangle.org/), were developed. In this review, we start by briefly summarizing classical X-ray scattering analyses providing insight into fundamental structural and interaction parameters. We then describe recent developments, integrating simulations, theory, and advanced X-ray scattering modeling, providing unique insights into the structure, energetics, and dynamics of self-assembled complexes. The structural information is essential for understanding the underlying physical chemistry principles leading to self-assembled supramolecular architectures and computational structural refinement., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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6. Dehydration does not affect lipid-based hydration lubrication.
- Author
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Dong Y, Kampf N, Schilt Y, Cao W, Raviv U, and Klein J
- Subjects
- Humans, Lubrication, Dimethyl Sulfoxide, Dehydration, Phosphatidylcholines, Water, Lipid Bilayers, Phosphorylcholine
- Abstract
Phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipid bilayers at surfaces massively reduce sliding friction, via the hydration lubrication mechanism acting at their highly-hydrated phosphocholine headgroups, a central paradigm of biological lubrication, particularly at articular cartilage surfaces where low friction is crucial for joint well-being. Nanotribological measurements probed the effect on such lubrication of dehydration by dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), known to strongly dehydrate the phosphocholine headgroups of such PC bilayers, i.e. reduce the thickness of the inter-bilayer water layer, and thus expected to substantially degrade the hydration lubrication. Remarkably, and unexpectedly, we found that the dehydration has little effect on the friction. We used several approaches, including atomic force microscopy, small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering and all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate this. Our results show that while DMSO clearly removes hydration water from the lipid head-groups, this is offset by both higher areal head-group density and by rigidity-enhancement of the lipid bilayers, both of which act to reduce frictional dissipation. This sheds strong light on the robustness of lipid-based hydration lubrication in biological systems, despite the ubiquitous presence of bio-osmolytes which compete for hydration water.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. Effect of the ammonium salt anion on the structure of doxorubicin complex and PEGylated liposomal doxorubicin nanodrugs.
- Author
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Schilt Y, Berman T, Wei X, Nativ-Roth E, Barenholz Y, and Raviv U
- Subjects
- Alkanesulfonates chemistry, Ammonium Sulfate chemistry, Anions chemistry, Crystallization, Doxorubicin chemistry, Mesylates chemistry, Ammonium Compounds chemistry, Antibiotics, Antineoplastic chemistry, Doxorubicin analogs & derivatives, Polyethylene Glycols chemistry
- Abstract
Background: In Doxil®, PEGylated nanoliposomes are created by hydration of the lipids in ammonium sulfate, and are remotely loaded with doxorubicin by a transmembrane ammonium gradient. The ammonium sulfate is then removed from the external aqueous phase, surrounding the liposomes, and replaced by an isoosmotic sucrose solution in 10 mM histidine buffer at pH 6.5., Methods: We prepared PEGylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) with a series of ammonium monovalent salts that after remote loading became the intraliposome doxorubicin counteranions. We analyzed the liposomes by solution X-ray scattering, differential scanning calorimetry, and electron micropscopy., Results: PLDs prepared with sulfonic acid derivatives as counteranion exhibited chemical and physical stabilities. We determined the effect of these ammonium salt counteranions on the structure, morphology, and thermotropic behavior of the PEGylated nanoliposomes, formed before and after doxorubicin loading, and the bulk properties of the doxorubicin-counteranion complexes. By comparing the structure of the doxorubicin complexes in the bulk and inside the nanoliposomes, we revealed the effect of confinement on the structure and doxorubicin release rate for each of the derivatives of the ammonium sulfonic acid counteranions., Conclusions: We found that the extent and direction of the doxorubicin confinement effect and its release rate were strongly dependent on the type of counteranion. The counteranions, however, neither affected the structure and thermotropic behavior of the liposome membrane, nor the thickness and density of the liposome PEG layers. In an additional study, it was demonstrated that PLD made with ammonium-methane sulfonate exhibit a much lower Hand and Foot syndrome., General Significance: The structure, physical state, and pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin in PEGylated nanoliposomes, prepared by transmembrane remote loading using gradients of ammonium salts, strongly depend on the counteranions., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2021
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8. 3D Printing of Ordered Mesoporous Silica Complex Structures.
- Author
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Shukrun Farrell E, Schilt Y, Moshkovitz MY, Levi-Kalisman Y, Raviv U, and Magdassi S
- Abstract
Ordered mesoporous silica materials gain high interest because of their potential applications in catalysis, selective adsorption, separation, and controlled drug release. Due to their morphological characteristics, mainly the tunable, ordered nanometric pores, they can be utilized as supporting hosts for confined chemical reactions. Applications of these materials, however, are limited by structural design. Here, we present a new approach for the 3D printing of complex geometry silica objects with an ordered mesoporous structure by stereolithography. The process uses photocurable liquid compositions that contain a structure-directing agent, silica precursors, and elastomer-forming monomers that, after printing and calcination, form porous silica monoliths. The objects have extremely high surface area, 1900 m
2 /g, and very low density and are thermally and chemically stable. This work enables the formation of ordered porous objects having complex geometries that can be utilized in applications in both the industry and academia, overcoming the structural limitations associated with traditional processing methods.- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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9. Hydrophobicity Control in Adaptive Crystalline Assemblies.
- Author
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Cohen E, Soffer Y, Weissman H, Bendikov T, Schilt Y, Raviv U, and Rybtchinski B
- Abstract
An amphiphile based on polyethylene glycol (PEG) polymer and two molecular moieties (perylene diimide and C
7 fluoroalkyl, PDI and C7 F) attached to its termini assembles into crystalline films with long-range order. The films reversibly switch from crystalline to amorphous above the PEG melting temperature. The adaptive behavior stems from the responsiveness of the PEG domain and the robustness of the PDI and C7 F assemblies. The hydrophobicity of the film can be controlled by heating, resulting in switching from highly hydrophobic to superhydrophilic. The long-range order, reversible crystallinity switching, and the temperature-controlled wettability demonstrate the potential of block copolymer analogues based on simple polymeric/molecular hybrids., (© 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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10. Wet Spinning and Drawing of Human Recombinant Collagen.
- Author
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Yaari A, Schilt Y, Tamburu C, Raviv U, and Shoseyov O
- Abstract
The advancement of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine has generated a growing demand for collagen fibers that both resemble native collagen fibers as closely as possible in terms of structure and function, and can be produced in large quantities and processed by current textile technologies. However, the collagen spinning methodologies reported thus far have not matured sufficiently to provide a spinning rate suitable for large-scale production and also generate fibers with insufficient mechanical properties. In the current study, we introduce three new elements into existing collagen fiber spinning technologies: the use of recombinant human collagen, high concentration dope, and spin drawing. At the optimal draw ratio, mechanically strong, aligned, thin fibers, with diameters similar to those of cotton or polyester fibers, are obtained at rates exceeding 1,000 m/h. The resulting fibers display an ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of 150 MPa and a strain of 0.21 after being hydrated in PBS, values which are comparable to and even surpass those reported for human patellar and Achilles tendons. The production technology is simple, based entirely on existing fiber production machinery, and suitable for scale-up and rapid production of large fiber quantities.
- Published
- 2016
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11. Nano-Drugs Based on Nano Sterically Stabilized Liposomes for the Treatment of Inflammatory Neurodegenerative Diseases.
- Author
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Turjeman K, Bavli Y, Kizelsztein P, Schilt Y, Allon N, Katzir TB, Sasson E, Raviv U, Ovadia H, and Barenholz Y
- Subjects
- Amyloid beta-Peptides metabolism, Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents pharmacokinetics, Apolipoproteins E metabolism, Cyclic N-Oxides chemistry, Cyclic N-Oxides pharmacokinetics, Cyclic N-Oxides pharmacology, Disease Models, Animal, Drug Delivery Systems methods, Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental drug therapy, Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental metabolism, Inflammation metabolism, Methylprednisolone Hemisuccinate chemistry, Methylprednisolone Hemisuccinate pharmacokinetics, Methylprednisolone Hemisuccinate pharmacology, Mice, Multiple Sclerosis drug therapy, Multiple Sclerosis metabolism, Neurodegenerative Diseases metabolism, Prodrugs chemistry, Prodrugs pharmacokinetics, Prodrugs pharmacology, Tissue Distribution, Anti-Inflammatory Agents chemistry, Anti-Inflammatory Agents pharmacology, Inflammation drug therapy, Liposomes chemistry, Nanoparticles chemistry, Neurodegenerative Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
The present study shows the advantages of liposome-based nano-drugs as a novel strategy of delivering active pharmaceutical ingredients for treatment of neurodegenerative diseases that involve neuroinflammation. We used the most common animal model for multiple sclerosis (MS), mice experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). The main challenges to overcome are the drugs' unfavorable pharmacokinetics and biodistribution, which result in inadequate therapeutic efficacy and in drug toxicity (due to high and repeated dosage). We designed two different liposomal nano-drugs, i.e., nano sterically stabilized liposomes (NSSL), remote loaded with: (a) a "water-soluble" amphipathic weak acid glucocorticosteroid prodrug, methylprednisolone hemisuccinate (MPS) or (b) the amphipathic weak base nitroxide, Tempamine (TMN). For the NSSL-MPS we also compared the effect of passive targeting alone and of active targeting based on short peptide fragments of ApoE or of β-amyloid. Our results clearly show that for NSSL-MPS, active targeting is not superior to passive targeting. For the NSSL-MPS and the NSSL-TMN it was demonstrated that these nano-drugs ameliorate the clinical signs and the pathology of EAE. We have further investigated the MPS nano-drug's therapeutic efficacy and its mechanism of action in both the acute and the adoptive transfer EAE models, as well as optimizing the perfomance of the TMN nano-drug. The highly efficacious anti-inflammatory therapeutic feature of these two nano-drugs meets the criteria of disease-modifying drugs and supports further development and evaluation of these nano-drugs as potential therapeutic agents for diseases with an inflammatory component.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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12. Charging and softening, collapse, and crystallization of dipolar phospholipid membranes by aqueous ionic liquid solutions.
- Author
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Dvir T, Fink L, Schilt Y, and Raviv U
- Abstract
Ionic liquids have a variety of unique controllable structures and properties. These properties may be used to tailor the self-assembly of charged and dipolar biomolecules. Using solution X-ray scattering, we measured the structure of Dilauryl(C12:0)-sn-glycero-3-phospho-l-choline (DLPC), a dipolar (or zwitterionic) lipid, in the water-soluble room temperature ionic liquid Ethyl Methyl Imidazolium Ethyl Sulfate (EMIES) and mixtures of EMIES and water. We find that the interaction between the lipid bilayers is dominated by the balance between the charging of the polar headgroups by the ionic liquid, softening of the bilayer, and the osmotic pressure induced by the solvent. This balance leads to the following changes with increasing ionic liquid concentration: an incomplete unbinding transition from an attractive regime to a swollen regime of the lamellar phase formed by the bilayers. The swollen phase is followed by a collapse of the bilayers into a highly desolvated lamellar phase at some critical EMIES concentration, and eventually formation of lipid-crystalline phase, at very high EMIES concentrations. The latter phase is revealed by wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) from the lipid solutions, showing multiple Bragg peaks, consistent with highly ordered structures. These structures were not observed in any other type of aqueous solutions containing monovalent or multivalent ions. The kinetics and temperature dependence of these transitions were also determined.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Regulating the size and stabilization of lipid raft-like domains and using calcium ions as their probe.
- Author
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Szekely O, Schilt Y, Steiner A, and Raviv U
- Subjects
- Cholesterol metabolism, Fatty Acids chemistry, Fatty Acids, Unsaturated chemistry, Ions metabolism, Lipid Bilayers analysis, Membrane Fluidity, Membrane Microdomains metabolism, Molecular Probes analysis, Phospholipids analysis, Phospholipids chemistry, Scattering, Small Angle, X-Rays, Biomimetics methods, Calcium metabolism, Chemistry, Physical, Cholesterol chemistry, Lipid Bilayers chemistry, Membrane Microdomains chemistry
- Abstract
We apply a means to probe, stabilize, and control the size of lipid raft-like domains in vitro. In biomembranes the size of lipid rafts is ca. 10-30 nm. In vitro, mixing saturated and unsaturated lipids results in microdomains, which are unstable and coalesce. This inconsistency is puzzling. It has been hypothesized that biological line-active surfactants reduce the line tension between saturated and unsaturated lipids and stabilize small domains in vivo. Using solution X-ray scattering, we studied the structure of binary and ternary lipid mixtures in the presence of calcium ions. Three lipids were used: saturated, unsaturated, and a hybrid (1-saturated-2-unsaturated) lipid that is predominant in the phospholipids of cellular membranes. Only membranes composed of the saturated lipid can adsorb calcium ions, become charged, and therefore considerably swell. The selective calcium affinity was used to show that binary mixtures, containing the saturated lipid, phase separated into large-scale domains. Our data suggests that by introducing the hybrid lipid to a mixture of the saturated and unsaturated lipids, the size of the domains decreased with the concentration of the hybrid lipid, until the three lipids could completely mix. We attribute this behavior to the tendency of the hybrid lipid to act as a line-active cosurfactant that can easily reside at the interface between the saturated and the unsaturated lipids and reduce the line tension between them. These findings are consistent with a recent theory and provide insight into the self-organization of lipid rafts, their stabilization, and size regulation in biomembranes., (© 2011 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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