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Dive into the research topics where Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila is active.

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Featured researches published by Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila.


ACS Nano | 2016

Acoustically Propelled Nanomotors for Intracellular siRNA Delivery

Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Chava Angell; Fernando Soto; Miguel Angel Lopez-Ramirez; Daniela F. Báez; Sibai Xie; Joseph Wang; Yi Chen

An effective intracellular gene silencing strategy based on acoustically propelled nanowires modified with an interfering RNAs (siRNA) payload is described. The gold nanowires (AuNW) are wrapped with a Rolling Circle Amplification (RCA) DNA strand, which serves to anchor the siRNA therapy. The ultrasound (US)-powered propulsion of the AuNW leads to fast internalization and rapid intracellular movement and hence to an accelerated siRNA delivery and silencing response. To optimize the micromotor gene silencing procedure, the influence of motion, time, and siRNA dosage was investigated, leading up to a 94% silencing after few minutes treatment with US-propelled siRNA-AuNWs, and to a dramatic (∼13-fold) improvement in the silencing response compared to the static modified nanowires. The ability of the nanomotor-based method for gene silencing has been demonstrated by measuring the GFP silencing response in two different cell lines (HEK-293 and MCF-7) and using detailed control experiments. The viability of the cells after the nanomotors treatment was examined using the MCF-7 cancer cell line. The use of DNA structures carried by the US-propelled nanomotors for gene silencing represents an efficient tool that addresses the challenges associated with RNA transportation and intracellular delivery. Future implementation of nanomachines in gene therapy applications can be expanded into a co-delivery platform for therapeutics.


ACS Nano | 2015

Lysozyme-Based Antibacterial Nanomotors

Melek Kiristi; Virendra V. Singh; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Murat Uygun; Fernando Soto; Deniz Aktaş Uygun; Joseph Wang

An effective and rapid bacterial killing nanotechnology strategy based on lysozyme-modified fuel-free nanomotors is demonstrated. The efficient antibacterial property of lysozyme, associated with the cleavage of glycosidic bonds of peptidoglycans present in the bacteria cell wall, has been combined with ultrasound (US)-propelled porous gold nanowire (p-AuNW) motors as biocompatible dynamic bacteria nanofighters. Coupling the antibacterial activity of the enzyme with the rapid movement of these p-AuNWs, along with the corresponding fluid dynamics, promotes enzyme-bacteria interactions and prevents surface aggregation of dead bacteria, resulting in a greatly enhanced bacteria-killing capability. The large active surface area of these nanoporous motors offers a significantly higher enzyme loading capacity compared to nonporous AuNWs, which results in a higher antimicrobial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Detailed characterization studies and control experiments provide useful insights into the underlying factors controlling the antibacterial performance of the new dynamic bacteria nanofighters. Rapid and effective killing of the Gram-positive Micrococcus lysodeikticus bacteria (69-84% within 1-5 min) is demonstrated.


ACS Nano | 2016

Enteric Micromotor Can Selectively Position and Spontaneously Propel in the Gastrointestinal Tract

Jinxing Li; Soracha Thamphiwatana; Wenjuan Liu; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Pavimol Angsantikul; Elodie Sandraz; Jianxing Wang; Tailin Xu; Fernando Soto; Valentin Ramez; Xiaolei Wang; Weiwei Gao; Liangfang Zhang; Joseph Wang

The gastrointestinal (GI) tract, which hosts hundreds of bacteria species, becomes the most exciting organ for the emerging microbiome research. Some of these GI microbes are hostile and cause a variety of diseases. These bacteria colonize in different segments of the GI tract dependent on the local physicochemical and biological factors. Therefore, selectively locating therapeutic or imaging agents to specific GI segments is of significant importance for studying gut microbiome and treating various GI-related diseases. Herein, we demonstrate an enteric micromotor system capable of precise positioning and controllable retention in desired segments of the GI tract. These motors, consisting of magnesium-based tubular micromotors coated with an enteric polymer layer, act as a robust nanobiotechnology tool for site-specific GI delivery. The micromotors can deliver payload to a particular location via dissolution of their enteric coating to activate their propulsion at the target site toward localized tissue penetration and retention.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Determinants of the Detection Limit and Specificity of Surface-Based Biosensors

Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Herschel M. Watkins; José M. Pingarrón; Kevin W. Plaxco; Giuseppe Palleschi; Francesco Ricci

Here, we employ a model electrochemical DNA sensor to demonstrate that the detection limit and specificity of surface-based sensors often are not dependent on the true affinity of the probe for its target but are simply dependent on the effective probe concentration. Under these circumstances, the observed affinity (and thus the sensors detection limit and specificity) will depend on the density with which the probes are packed on the surface of the sensor, the surface area, and even the volume of sample employed.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2010

Disposable amperometric magnetoimmunosensors for the specific detection of Streptococcus pneumoniae

Susana Campuzano; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; José Yuste; María Pedrero; José Luis García; Pedro García; Ernesto García; José M. Pingarrón

Disposable amperometric magnetoimmunosensors, based on the use of functionalized magnetic beads and gold screen-printed electrodes, have been developed for the selective detection and quantification of Streptococcus pneumoniae. A specific antibody prepared against a serotype 37 S. pneumoniae strain, selected by flow cytometry among seven anticapsular or antisomatic antibodies, was linked to Protein A-modified magnetic beads and incubated with bacteria. The same antibody, conjugated with horseradish peroxidase, was attached to the bacteria and the resulting modified magnetic beads were captured by a magnetic field on the surface of tetrathiafulvalene-modified gold screen-printed electrodes. The amperometric response obtained at -0.15 V vs. the silver pseudoreference electrode of the Au/SPE after the addition of H(2)O(2) was used as transduction signal. Different assay formats were examined and the experimental variables optimized. The limits of detection achieved, without pre-concentration or pre-enrichment steps, were 1.5×10(4) cfu mL(-1) (colony forming unit) and 6.3×10(5) cfu mL(-1) for S. pneumoniae strains Dawn (serotype 37) and R6 (non-encapsulated), respectively. The developed methodology shows a good selectivity against closely related streptococci and its usefulness for the analysis of inoculated urine samples has been demonstrated. The total analysis time of 3.5 h from sampling to measurement, the possibility to prepare up to 30 sensors per day and the use of small amounts of test solution for S. pneumoniae identification, constitute important advantages that make the developed methodology a promising alternative for clinical diagnosis.


Nature Communications | 2017

Micromotor-enabled active drug delivery for in vivo treatment of stomach infection

Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Pavimol Angsantikul; Jinxing Li; Miguel Angel Lopez-Ramirez; Doris E. Ramírez-Herrera; Soracha Thamphiwatana; Chuanrui Chen; Jorge Delezuk; Richard Samakapiruk; Valentin Ramez; Liangfang Zhang; Joseph Wang

Advances in bioinspired design principles and nanomaterials have led to tremendous progress in autonomously moving synthetic nano/micromotors with diverse functionalities in different environments. However, a significant gap remains in moving nano/micromotors from test tubes to living organisms for treating diseases with high efficacy. Here we present the first, to our knowledge, in vivo therapeutic micromotors application for active drug delivery to treat gastric bacterial infection in a mouse model using clarithromycin as a model antibiotic and Helicobacter pylori infection as a model disease. The propulsion of drug-loaded magnesium micromotors in gastric media enables effective antibiotic delivery, leading to significant bacteria burden reduction in the mouse stomach compared with passive drug carriers, with no apparent toxicity. Moreover, while the drug-loaded micromotors reach similar therapeutic efficacy as the positive control of free drug plus proton pump inhibitor, the micromotors can function without proton pump inhibitors because of their built-in proton depletion function associated with their locomotion.Nano- and micromotors have been demonstrated in vitro for a range of applications. Here the authors demonstrate the in-vivo therapeutic use of micromotors to treat H. pylori infection.


ACS Nano | 2017

Nanomotor-Enabled pH-Responsive Intracellular Delivery of Caspase-3: Toward Rapid Cell Apoptosis

Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Doris E. Ramírez-Herrera; Susana Campuzano; Pavimol Angsantikul; Liangfang Zhang; Joseph Wang

Direct and efficient intracellular delivery of enzymes to cytosol holds tremendous therapeutic potential while remaining an unmet technical challenge. Herein, an ultrasound (US)-propelled nanomotor approach and a high-pH-responsive delivery strategy are reported to overcome this challenge using caspase-3 (CASP-3) as a model enzyme. Consisting of a gold nanowire (AuNW) motor with a pH-responsive polymer coating, in which the CASP-3 is loaded, the resulting nanomotor protects the enzyme from release and deactivation prior to reaching an intracellular environment. However, upon entering a cell and exposure to the higher intracellular pH, the polymer coating is dissolved, thereby directly releasing the active CASP-3 enzyme to the cytosol and causing rapid cell apoptosis. In vitro studies using gastric cancer cells as a model cell line demonstrate that such a motion-based active delivery approach leads to remarkably high apoptosis efficiency within a significantly shorter time and with a lower amount of CASP-3 compared to other control groups not involving US-propelled nanomotors. For instance, the reported nanomotor system can achieve 80% apoptosis of human gastric adenocarcinoma cells within only 5 min, which dramatically outperforms other CASP-3 delivery approaches. These results indicate that the US-propelled nanomotors may act as a powerful vehicle for cytosolic delivery of active therapeutic proteins, which would offer an attractive means to enhance the current landscape of intracellular protein delivery and therapy. While CASP-3 is selected as a model protein in this study, the same nanomotor approach can be readily applied to a variety of different therapeutic proteins.


Electrophoresis | 2012

Design and fabrication of a COP-based microfluidic chip: Chronoamperometric detection of Troponin T

Llibertat Abad; Francisco Javier del Campo; Francesc Xavier Muñoz; Luis J. Fernández; Daniel Calavia; Gloria Colom; Juan Pablo Salvador; María Pilar Marco; Vanessa Escamilla-Gómez; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Susana Campuzano; María Pedrero; José M. Pingarrón; Neus Godino; Robert Gorkin; Jens Ducrée

This work demonstrates the design and fabrication of an all cyclo‐olefin polymer based microfluidic device capable of capturing magnetic beads and performing electrochemical detection in a series of gold electrodes. The size of chip is of a microscope slide and features six independent measuring cells for multianalyte detection purposes. The aim of this work is to show that rapid prototyping techniques can be instrumental in the development of novel bioassays, particularly in clinical diagnosis applications. We show the successful determination of troponin‐T, a cardiac disease marker, in the clinically relevant range of 0.05–1.0 ng/mL. This methodology achieves a detection limit of 0.017 ng/mL in PBS solutions, and is capable of detecting less than 1 ng/mL in a 1:50 human serum dilution.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Active Intracellular Delivery of a Cas9/sgRNA Complex Using Ultrasound‐Propelled Nanomotors

Malthe Hansen-Bruhn; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Mara Beltrán-Gastélum; Jing Zhao; Doris E. Ramírez-Herrera; Pavimol Angsantikul; Kurt V. Gothelf; Liangfang Zhang; Joseph Wang

Direct and rapid intracellular delivery of a functional Cas9/sgRNA complex using ultrasound-powered nanomotors is reported. The Cas9/sgRNA complex is loaded onto the nanomotor surface through a reversible disulfide linkage. A 5 min ultrasound treatment enables the Cas9/sgRNA-loaded nanomotors to directly penetrate through the plasma membrane of GFP-expressing B16F10 cells. The Cas9/sgRNA is released inside the cells to achieve highly effective GFP gene knockout. The acoustic Cas9/sgRNA-loaded nanomotors display more than 80 % GFP knockout within 2 h of cell incubation compared to 30 % knockout using static nanowires. More impressively, the nanomotors enable highly efficient knockout with just 0.6 nm of the Cas9/sgRNA complex. This nanomotor-based intracellular delivery method thus offers an attractive route to overcome physiological barriers for intracellular delivery of functional proteins and RNAs, thus indicating considerable promise for highly efficient therapeutic applications.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Biomimetic Platelet‐Camouflaged Nanorobots for Binding and Isolation of Biological Threats

Jinxing Li; Pavimol Angsantikul; Wenjuan Liu; Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila; Xiaocong Chang; Elodie Sandraz; Yuyan Liang; Siyu Zhu; Yue Zhang; Chuanrui Chen; Weiwei Gao; Liangfang Zhang; Joseph Wang

One emerging and exciting topic in robotics research is the design of micro-/nanoscale robots for biomedical operations. Unlike industrial robots that are developed primarily to automate routine and dangerous tasks, biomedical nanorobots are designed for complex, physiologically relevant environments, and tasks that involve unanticipated biological events. Here, a biologically interfaced nanorobot is reported, made of magnetic helical nanomotors cloaked with the plasma membrane of human platelets. The resulting biomimetic nanorobots possess a biological membrane coating consisting of diverse functional proteins associated with human platelets. Compared to uncoated nanomotors which experience severe biofouling effects and hence hindered propulsion in whole blood, the platelet-membrane-cloaked nanomotors disguise as human platelets and display efficient propulsion in blood over long time periods. The biointerfaced nanorobots display platelet-mimicking properties, including adhesion and binding to toxins and platelet-adhering pathogens, such as Shiga toxin and Staphylococcus aureus bacteria. The locomotion capacity and platelet-mimicking biological function of the biomimetic nanomotors offer efficient binding and isolation of these biological threats. The dynamic biointerfacing platform enabled by platelet-membrane cloaked nanorobots thus holds considerable promise for diverse biomedical and biodefense applications.

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Joseph Wang

University of California

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Susana Campuzano

Spanish National Research Council

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María Pedrero

Complutense University of Madrid

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Jinxing Li

University of California

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Weiwei Gao

University of California

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Vanessa Escamilla-Gómez

Complutense University of Madrid

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