Ajda Flašker
University of Ljubljana
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ajda Flašker.
International Journal of Nanomedicine | 2015
Mukta Kulkarni; Ajda Flašker; Maruša Lokar; Katjusa Mrak-Poljsak; Anca Mazare; Andrej Artenjak; Saša Čučnik; Slavko Kralj; Aljaž Velikonja; Patrik Schmuki; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Snezna Sodin-Semrl; Aleš Iglič
Titanium and titanium alloys are considered to be one of the most applicable materials in medical devices because of their suitable properties, most importantly high corrosion resistance and the specific combination of strength with biocompatibility. In order to improve the biocompatibility of titanium surfaces, the current report initially focuses on specifying the topography of titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanotubes (NTs) by electrochemical anodization. The zeta potential (ζ-potential) of NTs showed a negative value and confirmed the agreement between the measured and theoretically predicted dependence of ζ-potential on salt concentration, whereby the absolute value of ζ-potential diminished with increasing salt concentrations. We investigated binding of various plasma proteins with different sizes and charges using the bicinchoninic acid assay and immunofluorescence microscopy. Results showed effective and comparatively higher protein binding to NTs with 100 nm diameters (compared to 50 or 15 nm). We also showed a dose-dependent effect of serum amyloid A protein binding to NTs. These results and theoretical calculations of total available surface area for binding of proteins indicate that the largest surface area (also considering the NT lengths) is available for 100 nm NTs, with decreasing surface area for 50 and 15 nm NTs. These current investigations will have an impact on increasing the binding ability of biomedical devices in the body leading to increased durability of biomedical devices.
Nature Protocols | 2013
Boštjan Rituper; Alenka Guček; Jernej Jorgačevski; Ajda Flašker; Marko Kreft; Robert Zorec
In order to understand exocytosis and endocytosis, it is necessary to study these processes directly. An elegant way to do this is by measuring plasma membrane capacitance (Cm), a parameter proportional to cell surface area, the fluctuations of which are due to fusion and fission of secretory and other vesicles. Here we describe protocols that enable high-resolution Cm measurements in macroscopic and microscopic modes. Macroscopic mode, performed in whole-cell configuration, is used for measuring bulk Cm changes in the entire membrane area, and it enables the introduction of exocytosis stimulators or inhibitors into the cytosol through the patch pipette. Microscopic mode, performed in cell-attached configuration, enables measurements of Cm with attofarad resolution and allows characterization of fusion pore properties. Although we usually apply these protocols to primary pituitary cells and astrocytes, they can be adapted and used for other cell types. After initial hardware setup and culture preparation, several Cm measurements can be performed daily.
Cell Calcium | 2012
Boštjan Rituper; Ajda Flašker; Alenka Guček; Helena H. Chowdhury; Robert Zorec
Since the 1970s, much effort was been expended researching mechanisms of regulated exocytosis. Early work focused mainly on the role of proteins. Most notably the discovery of SNARE proteins in the 1980s and the zippering hypothesis brought us much closer to understanding the complex interactions in membrane fusion between vesicle and plasma membranes, a pivotal component of regulated exocytosis. However, most likely due to the predictions of the Singer-Nicholson fluid mosaic membrane model, the lipid components of the exocytotic machinery remained largely overlooked. Lipids were considered passive constituents of cellular membranes, not contributing much, if anything, to the process of exocytosis and membrane fusion. Since the 1990s, this so-called proteocentric view has been gradually giving way to the new perspective best described with the term proteolipidic. Many lipids were found to be of great importance in the regulation of exocytosis. Here we highlight the role of cholesterol. Furthermore, by using high-resolution cell-attached membrane capacitance measurements, we have monitored unitary exocytotic events in cholesterol-depleted membranes. We show that the frequency of these events is attenuated, providing evidence at the single vesicle level that cholesterol directly influences the merger of the vesicle and the plasma membranes.
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2013
Ajda Flašker; Jernej Jorgačevski; Ana I. Calejo; Marko Kreft; Robert Zorec
Neuroendocrine cells contain small and large vesicles, but the functional significance of vesicle diameter is unclear. We studied unitary exocytic events of prolactin-containing vesicles in lactotrophs by monitoring discrete steps in membrane capacitance. In the presence of sphingosine, which recruits VAMP2 for SNARE complex formation, the frequency of transient and full fusion events increased. Vesicles with larger diameters proceeded to full fusion, but smaller vesicles remained entrapped in transient exocytosis. The diameter of vesicle dense cores released by full fusion exocytosis into the extracellular space was larger than the diameter of the remaining intracellular vesicles beneath the plasma membrane. Labeling with prolactin- and VAMP2-antibodies revealed a correlation between the diameters of colocalized prolactin- and VAMP2-positive structures. It is proposed that sphingosine-mediated facilitation of regulated exocytosis is not only related to the number of SNARE complexes per vesicle but also depends on the vesicle size, which may determine the transition between transient and full fusion exocytosis.
Bioelectrochemistry | 2016
Ita Junkar; Mukta Kulkarni; Barbara Drašler; Neža Rugelj; Anca Mazare; Ajda Flašker; Damjana Drobne; Petr Humpolíček; Matic Resnik; Patrik Schmuki; Miran Mozetič; Aleš Iglič
Sterilization is the final surface treatment procedure of all implantable devices and is one of the key factors which have to be considered before implementation. Since different sterilization procedures for all implantable devices influence mechanical properties as well as biological response, the influence of different sterilization techniques on titanium nanotubes was studied. Commonly used sterilization techniques such as autoclaving, ultra-violet light sterilization, hydrogen peroxide plasma sterilization as well as the not so frequently used gaseous oxygen plasma sterilization were used. Three different nanotube diameters; 15 nm, 50 nm and 100 nm were employed to study the effects of various sterilization techniques. It was observed that autoclave sterilization resulted in destruction of nanotubular features on all three studied nanotube diameters, while UV-light and both kinds of plasma sterilization did not cause any significant morphological changes on the surfaces. Differences between the sterilization techniques employed influenced cytocompatibility, especially in the case of nanotubes with 100 nm diameter.
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2016
Ajda Flašker; Mukta Kulkarni; Katjusa Mrak-Poljsak; Ita Junkar; Saša Čučnik; Polona Žigon; Anca Mazare; Patrik Schmuki; Aleš Iglič; Snezna Sodin-Semrl
Nanoscale topography in improving vascular response in vitro was established previously on various titanium surfaces. In the present study different surface nanotopographies that is different diameters of titanium dioxide (TiO2 ) nanotubes (NTs) were fabricated by electrochemical anodization and conditioned with highly reactive gaseous oxygen plasma. The morphology of different diameter NTs was studied by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy, while changes in chemical composition on the surface before and after plasma treatment were determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Performance of human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC) on those conditioned surfaces was studied in regard to cell proliferation, released IL-6 protein and immunofluorescence microscopy (IFM). We show that HCAEC function is dependent on the diameter of the TiO2 NTs, functioning far less optimally when bound to 100 nm TiO2 NTs as compared to Ti foil, 15 nm NTs or 50 nm NTs. There were improved, morphological cell shape changes, observed with IFM, between HCAEC growing on oxygen-rich plasma-treated versus nontreated 100 nm NTs. These endothelialized conditioned Ti nanosurfaces could elucidate optimization conditions necessary for vascular implants in coronary arteries.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Matic Kisovec; Saša Rezelj; Primoz Knap; Miša Mojca Cajnko; Simon Caserman; Ajda Flašker; Nada Znidarsic; Matej Repič; Janez Mavri; Yi Ruan; Simon Scheuring; Marjetka Podobnik; Gregor Anderluh
Listeriolysin O (LLO) is a cytolysin capable of forming pores in cholesterol-rich lipid membranes of host cells. It is conveniently suited for engineering a pH-governed responsiveness, due to a pH sensor identified in its structure that was shown before to affect its stability. Here we introduced a new level of control of its hemolytic activity by making a variant with hemolytic activity that was pH-dependent. Based on detailed structural analysis coupled with molecular dynamics and mutational analysis, we found that the bulky side chain of Tyr406 allosterically affects the pH sensor. Molecular dynamics simulation further suggested which other amino acid residues may also allosterically influence the pH-sensor. LLO was engineered to the point where it can, in a pH-regulated manner, perforate artificial and cellular membranes. The single mutant Tyr406Ala bound to membranes and oligomerized similarly to the wild-type LLO, however, the final membrane insertion step was pH-affected by the introduced mutation. We show that the mutant toxin can be activated at the surface of artificial membranes or living cells by a single wash with slightly acidic pH buffer. Y406A mutant has a high potential in development of novel nanobiotechnological applications such as controlled release of substances or as a sensor of environmental pH.
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2013
Doron Kabaso; Jernej Jorgačevski; Ana I. Calejo; Ajda Flašker; Alenka Guček; Marko Kreft; Robert Zorec
In regulated exocytosis the merger between the vesicle and the plasma membranes leads to the formation of an aqueous channel (a fusion-pore), through which vesicular secretions exit into the extracellular space. A fusion pore was thought to be a short-lived intermediate preceding full-fusion of the vesicle and the plasma membranes (full-fusion exocytosis). However, transient exocytic events were also observed, where the fusion-pore opens and closes, repetitively. Here we asked whether there are different discrete states of the open fusion-pore. Unitary exocytic events were recorded by the high-resolution cell-attached patch-clamp method in pituitary lactotrophs and brain astrocytes. We monitored reversible unitary exocytic events, characterized by an on-step, which is followed by an off-step in membrane capacitance (Cm), a parameter linearly related to the membrane area. The results revealed three categories of reversible exocytic events (transient fusion-pore openings), which do not end with the complete integration of the vesicle membrane into the plasma membrane. These were categorized according to the observed differences in the amplitude and sign of the change in the real (Re) parts of the admittance signals: in case I events (Re ≈ 0) fusion pores are relatively wide; in case II (Re > 0) and case III (Re < 0) events fusion pores are relatively narrow. We show that case III events are more likely to occur for small vesicles, whereas, case II events are more likely to occur for larger vesicles. Case III events were considerably more frequent in astrocytes than in lactotrophs.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Frédéric Darios; Jernej Jorgačevski; Ajda Flašker; Robert Zorec; Virginia Garcia-Martinez; José Villanueva; Luis M. Gutiérrez; Charlotte Leese; Manjot Bal; Elena Nosyreva; Ege T. Kavalali; Bazbek Davletov
Neurotransmission and secretion of hormones involve a sequence of protein/lipid interactions with lipid turnover impacting on vesicle trafficking and ultimately fusion of secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane. We previously demonstrated that sphingosine, a sphingolipid metabolite, promotes formation of the SNARE complex required for membrane fusion and also increases the rate of exocytosis in isolated nerve terminals, neuromuscular junctions, neuroendocrine cells and in hippocampal neurons. Recently a fungi-derived sphingosine homologue, FTY720, has been approved for treatment of multiple sclerosis. In its non-phosphorylated form FTY720 accumulates in the central nervous system, reaching high levels which could affect neuronal function. Considering close structural similarity of sphingosine and FTY720 we investigated whether FTY720 has an effect on regulated exocytosis. Our data demonstrate that FTY720 can activate vesicular synaptobrevin for SNARE complex formation and enhance exocytosis in neuroendocrine cells and neurons.
Advances on Planar Lipid Bilayers and Liposomes | 2011
Jernej Jorgačevski; Boštjan Rituper; Miha Fošnarič; Ajda Flašker; Nina Vardjan; Matjaž Stenovec; Maja Potokar; Marko Kreft; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Aleš Iglič; Robert Zorec
Abstract In multicellular organisms, signaling is a necessity and an important mode of communication between cells is mediated by neurotransmitters, hormones, and other chemical messengers that are stored in secretory vesicles. In stimulated conditions secretory vesicles, which are trafficked to be docked at the plasma membrane, enter exocytosis, characterized by vesicle and plasma membrane merger. Due to repulsive forces of negatively charged membrane surfaces, it was long believed that the fusion pore is merely a short lived intermediate state leading irreversibly to a complete merger of both membranes. However, recent results show that the fusion pore is a rather stable structure, which can reversibly reopen to subnanometer diameters; dimensions too narrow to permit the exit of the cargo into the extracellular space. The aim of this chapter is to first review how can such a structure attain stability and compare two models in which membrane constituents are either isotropic or anisotropic in nature. Then we address the molecular nature of such a stable, release-unproductive fusion pore. We conclude that membrane constituents of the stable fusion pore membrane, being made of proteins and/or lipids, very likely consist of architectural elements that exhibit anisotropicity. The dynamics of fusion pore diameter is then determined by the density and architectural properties of these membrane constituents at fusion pore locales.