50 research outputs found

    A Self-Organized ECM-Mimetic Model Based on an Amphiphilic Multiblock Silk-Elastin-Like co-Recombinamer with a Concomitant Dual Physical Gelation Process

    Get PDF
    Although significant progress has been made in the area of injectable hydrogels for biomedical applications and model cell niches, further improvements are still needed, especially in terms of mechanical performance, stability, and biomimicry of the native fibrillar architecture found in the extracellular matrix (ECM). This work focuses on the design and production of a silk-elastin-based injectable multiblock corecombinamer that spontaneously forms a stable physical nanofibrillar hydrogel under physiological conditions. That differs from previously reported silk-elastin-like polymers on a major content and predominance of the elastin-like part, as well as a more complex structure and behavior of such a part of the molecule, which is aimed to obtain well-defined hydrogels. Rheological and DSC experiments showed that this system displays a coordinated and concomitant dual gelation mechanism. In a first stage, a rapid, thermally driven gelation of the corecombinamer solution takes place once the system reaches body temperature due to the thermal responsiveness of the elastin-like (EL) parts and the amphiphilic multiblock design of the corecombinamer. A bridged micellar structure is the dominant microscopic feature of this stage, as demonstrated by AFM and TEM. Completion of the initial stage triggers the second, which is comprised of a stabilization, reinforcement, and microstructuring of the gel. FTIR analysis shows that these events involve the formation of β-sheets around the silk motifs. The emergence of such β-sheet structures leads to the spontaneous self-organization of the gel into the final fibrous structure. Despite the absence of biological cues, here we set the basis of the minimal structure that is able to display such a set of physical properties and undergo microscopic transformation from a solution to a fibrous hydrogel. The results point to the potential of this system as a basis for the development of injectable fibrillar biomaterial platforms toward a fully functional, biomimetic, artificial extracellular matrix, and cell niches.Este trabajo forma parte de Proyectos de Investigación financiados por la Comisión Europea a través del Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (ERDF), por el del MINECO (MAT2013-41723-R, MAT2013- 42473-R, PRI-PIBAR-2011-1403 y MAT2012-38043), la Junta de Castilla y León (VA049A11, VA152A12 y VA155A12) y el Instituto de Salud Carlos III bajo el Centro en Red de Medicina Regenerativa y Terapia Celular de Castilla y León

    Hunting for cultivable Micromonospora strains in soils of the Atacama Desert

    Get PDF
    Innovative procedures were used to selectively isolate small numbers of Micromonospora strains from extreme hyper-arid and high altitude Atacama Desert soils. Micromonosporae were recognised on isolation plates by their ability to produce filamentous microcolonies that were strongly attached to the agar. Most of the isolates formed characteristic orange colonies that lacked aerial hyphae and turned black on spore formation, whereas those from the high altitude soil were dry, blue-green and covered by white aerial hyphae. The isolates were assigned to seven multi- and eleven single-membered groups based on BOX-PCR profiles. Representatives of the groups were assigned to either multi-membered clades that also contained marker strains or formed distinct phyletic lines in the Micromonospora 16S rRNA gene tree; many of the isolates were considered to be putatively novel species of Micromonospora. Most of the isolates from the high altitude soils showed activity against wild type strains of Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas fluorescens while those from the rhizosphere of Parastrephia quadrangulares and from the Lomas Bayas hyper-arid soil showed resistance to UV radiation

    Hypoxia signaling pathways in cancer metabolism: the importance of co-selecting interconnected physiological pathways

    Full text link

    Nocardia aciditolerans sp nov., isolated from a spruce forest soil

    No full text
    corecore