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Dive into the research topics where Anton Chistyakov is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton Chistyakov.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Glucose-Utilizing Strain, Cupriavidus euthrophus B-10646: Growth Kinetics, Characterization and Synthesis of Multicomponent PHAs

T. G. Volova; Evgeniy G. Kiselev; Olga N. Vinogradova; Elena D. Nikolaeva; Anton Chistyakov; Aleksey G. Sukovatiy; Ekaterina I. Shishatskaya

This study investigates kinetic and production parameters of a glucose-utilizing bacterial strain, C. eutrophus B-10646, and its ability to synthesize PHA terpolymers. Optimization of a number of parameters of bacterial culture (cell concentration in the inoculum, physiological activity of the inoculum, determined by the initial intracellular polymer content, and glucose concentration in the culture medium during cultivation) provided cell concentrations and PHA yields reaching 110 g/L and 80%, respectively, under two-stage batch culture conditions. Addition of precursor substrates (valerate, hexanoate, propionate, γ-butyrolactone) to the culture medium enabled synthesis of PHA terpolymers, P(3HB/3HV/4HB) and P(3HB/3HV/3HHx), with different composition and different molar fractions of 3HB, 3HV, 4HB, and 3HHx. Different types of PHA terpolymers synthesized by C. eutrophus B-10646 were used to prepare films, whose physicochemical and physical-mechanical properties were investigated. The properties of PHA terpolymers were significantly different from those of the P3HB homopolymer: they had much lower degrees of crystallinity and lower melting points and thermal decomposition temperatures, with the difference between these temperatures remaining practically unchanged. Films prepared from all PHA terpolymers had higher mechanical strength and elasticity than P3HB films. In spite of dissimilar surface structures, all films prepared from PHA terpolymers facilitated attachment and proliferation of mouse fibroblast NIH 3T3 cells more effectively than polystyrene and the highly crystalline P3HB.


Integrated Photonics: Materials, Devices, and Applications II | 2013

High-resolution 3D structural and optical analyses of hybrid or composite materials by means of scanning probe microscopy combined with the ultramicrotome technique: an example of application to engineering of liquid crystals doped with fluorescent quantum dots

Konstantin Mochalov; Anton E. Efimov; Alexey Bobrovsky; I. I. Agapov; Anton Chistyakov; Vladimir Oleinikov; Igor Nabiev

Combination of nanometer-scale 3D structural analysis with optical characterization of the same material is a challenging task. Its results may be important for nanophotonics, materials science, and quality control. We have developed a new technique for complementary high-resolution structural and optical characterization followed by optical spectroscopic and microscopic measurements accompanied by reconstruction of the 3D structure in the same area of the sample. The 3D structure is reconstructed by combination of ultramicrotomic and SPM techniques allowing the study of the 3D distribution of implanted nanoparticles and their effect on the matrix structure. The combination of scanning probe nanotomography (SPN) and optical microspectroscopy makes it possible to direct estimate how the 3D structural characteristics of materials affect their macroscopic optical properties. The technique developed has been applied to the engineering of materials made from cholesteric liquid crystals and fluorescent quantum dots (QDs). These materials permit photochemical patterning and image recording through the changes in the dissymmetry factor of circular polarization of QD emission. The differences in the polarisation images and morphological characteristics of the liquid crystal matrix have proved to be correlated with the arrangement of the areas of homogeneous distribution and nonhomogeneous clustering of QDs. The reconstruction of the 3D structure of the liquid crystal matrix in the areas of homogeneous QD distribution has shown that QDs embedded into cholesteric liquid crystal matrices do not perturb their periodic planar texture. The combined optical/SPM/ultramicrotome technique will be indispensable for evaluating the effects of inorganic nanoparticles on the organisation of organic and liquid crystal matrices, biomedical materials, cells, and tissues.


Optics and Spectroscopy | 2016

The effect of silver nanoparticles on the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin of purple membranes of Halobacterium salinarum

Vladimir Oleinikov; Konstantin Mochalov; Daria O. Solovyeva; Anton Chistyakov; E. P. Lukashev; Igor Nabiev

The effect of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) that are adsorbed on the surface of the purple membranes of Halobacterium salinarium bacteria on the optical properties and functional peculiarities of the lightsensitive protein bacteriorhodopsin (BR) has been demonstrated for the first time. Two mechanisms of the effect of AgNPs on the protein photocycle have been demonstrated using Raman scattering, giant Raman scattering, flash photolysis, and atomic force microscopy. It has been shown that the nanoparticles in the immediate spatial vicinity of BR fix its photocycle at the stage where it was at the moment of interaction with the nanoparticles. At greater distances, which reach three radii of an AgNPs, they have a weaker effect on BR, under which it retains the ability to be involved in the photocycle, however, has its parameters significantly changed. Thus, in the case of wild-type BR the photocycle accelerates and for the BR-D96N mutant it becomes slower. The data that are obtained could be of significance for creation of such optoelectronic hybrid systems with BR, where the parameters of its photocycle can be controlled using NPs. The results of the study may also be used in the field of nanobioengineering research, which is directed to creation of unique materials with controlled properties for recording and storage of information, energy transformation, and identification and characterization of trace amounts of analytes.


Ultramicroscopy | 2017

An instrumental approach to combining confocal microspectroscopy and 3D scanning probe nanotomography

Konstantin Mochalov; Anton Chistyakov; Daria O. Solovyeva; Alexey V. Mezin; Vladimir Oleinikov; Ivan S. Vaskan; Michael Molinari; I. I. Agapov; Igor Nabiev; Anton E. Efimov

In the past decade correlative microscopy, which combines the potentials of different types of high-resolution microscopies with a variety of optical microspectroscopy techniques, has been attracting increasing attention in material science and biological research. One of outstanding solutions in this area is the combination of scanning probe microscopy (SPM), which provides data on not only the topography, but also the spatial distribution of a wide range of physical properties (elasticity, conductivity, etc.), with ultramicrotomy, allowing 3D multiparametric examination of materials. The combination of SPM and ultramicrotomy (scanning probe nanotomography) is very appropriate for characterization of soft multicompound nanostructurized materials, such as polymer matrices and microstructures doped with different types of nanoparticles (magnetic nanoparticles, quantum dots, nanotubes, etc.), and biological materials. A serious problem of this technique is a lack of chemical and optical characterization tools, which may be solved by using optical microspectroscopy. Here, we report the development of an instrumental approach to combining confocal microspectroscopy and 3D scanning probe nanotomography in a single apparatus. This approach retains all the advantages of SPM and upright optical microspectroscopy and allows 3D multiparametric characterization using both techniques. As the first test of the system developed, we have performed correlative characterization of the morphology and the magnetic and fluorescent properties of fluorescent magnetic microspheres doped with a fluorescent dye and magnetic nanoparticles. The results of this study can be used to obtain 3D volume images of a specimen for most high-resolution near-field scanning probe microscopies: SNOM, TERS, AFM-IR, etc. This approach will result in development of unique techniques combining the advantages of SPM (nanoscale morphology and a wide range of physical parameters) and high-resolution optical microspectroscopy (nanoscale chemical mapping and optical properties) and allowing simultaneous 3D measurements.


Optics and Spectroscopy | 2017

The effect of plasmon silver and exiton semiconductor nanoparticles on the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle in Halobacterium salinarum membranes

Vladimir Oleinikov; E. P. Lukashev; S. Yu. Zaitsev; Anton Chistyakov; Daria O. Solovyeva; Konstantin Mochalov; Igor Nabiev

The interaction of semiconductor quantum dots and silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) with bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a membrane protein contained in the purple membrane (PM) of Halobacterium salinarum, is studied. It is shown that both types of nanoparticles are adsorbed efficiently on the surface of the purple membranes, modulating the parameters of the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. Electrostatic interactions are found to be the main cause of the effect of nanoparticles on the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. These results explain our earlier data on the “fixation” of the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle for protein molecules trapped after incubation of the purple membranes with silver nanoparticles near the location of the “hot spots” of the effect of surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). It is demonstrated that exposure of silver nanoparticles with bacteriorhodopsin in SERS-active regions lowers the amount of bacteriorhodopsin molecules involved in phototransformations.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Extension of the spectral range of bacteriorhodopsin functional activity by energy transfer from quantum dots

Vladimir Oleinikov; Nicolas Bouchonville; Alyona Sukhanova; Michael Molinari; Svetlana Sizova; Konstantin Mochalov; Anton Chistyakov; E. P. Lukashev; Aliaksandra Rakovich; John F. Donegan; Igor Nabiev

Monodispersed semiconductor nanocrystals or quantum dots (QDs) specifically immobilized on the surface of purple membranes (PMs) containing bacteriorhodopsin (bR) can harvest light in the UV to blue region, which cannot be absorbed efficiently by the PMs alone, and transfer the harvested energy to the retinal chromophores of bR via highly efficient Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET). CdTe or CdSe/ZnS QDs with a quantum yield as high as 70% have been used to estimate different parameters characterizing the improvement of the bR biological function caused by nanocrystals. AFM examination has shown that the most FRET-efficient QD–PM hybrid structures are characterized by the highest level of QD ordering; hence, AFM imaging of bR–PM hybrid materials provides the basis for optimization of the assembly design in order to engineer bio-hybrid structures with advanced optical and photovoltaic properties. Oriented bR-containing proteoliposomes tagged with QDs at a QD-to-bR molar ratio of up to 1:5 have been engineered and used to analyze the photoresponse, with the bR proton pumping considerably increased. Finally, the kinetics of the potential/current generation in films of oriented bR containing or not containing QDs have been analyzed. Incorporation of QDs resulted in an increase in the potential/current generation rate and in an almost fourfold increase in the rate of Mform formation. Thus, the improvement of the bR native function by QDs may be caused by two reasons: an extension of the range of utilized light and an increase in the rate of the bR photocycle.


ACS Nano | 2013

Combined scanning probe nanotomography and optical microspectroscopy: a correlative technique for 3D characterization of nanomaterials.

Konstantin Mochalov; Anton E. Efimov; Alexey Bobrovsky; I. I. Agapov; Anton Chistyakov; Vladimir Oleinikov; Alyona Sukhanova; Igor Nabiev


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A-chemistry | 2014

AFM study of laser-induced crater formation in films of azobenzene-containing photochromic nematic polymer and cholesteric mixture

Alexey Bobrovsky; Konstantin Mochalov; Anton Chistyakov; Vladimir Oleinikov; Valery Shibaev


Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Features of Double-Spiral “Valley-Hills” Surface Topography Formation in Photochromic Cholesteric Oligomer-Based Films and Their Changes Under Polarized Light Action

Alexey Bobrovsky; Konstantin Mochalov; Anton Chistyakov; Vladimir Oleinikov; Valery Shibaev


Materials Today: Proceedings | 2016

Silver Nanoparticles Strongly Affect the Properties of Bacteriorhodopsin, a Photosensitive Protein of Halobacterium Salinarium Purple Membranes☆

Konstantin Mochalov; Daria O. Solovyeva; Anton Chistyakov; Boris Zimka; Eugeni P. Lukashev; Igor Nabiev; Vladimir Oleinikov

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Igor Nabiev

National Research Nuclear University MEPhI

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Vladimir Oleinikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Daria O. Solovyeva

National Research Nuclear University MEPhI

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I. I. Agapov

Moscow State University

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Boris Zimka

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Dmitriy Dovzhenko

National Research Nuclear University MEPhI

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