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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Piazzoni is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Piazzoni.


Nanotechnology | 2012

Bottom-up engineering of the surface roughness of nanostructured cubic zirconia to control cell adhesion.

Ajay Vikram Singh; M Ferri; Margherita Tamplenizza; Francesca Borghi; Giorgio Divitini; Caterina Ducati; Cristina Lenardi; Claudio Piazzoni; M. Merlini; Alessandro Podestà; Paolo Milani

Nanostructured cubic zirconia is a strategic material for biomedical applications since it combines superior structural and optical properties with a nanoscale morphology able to control cell adhesion and proliferation. We produced nanostructured cubic zirconia thin films at room temperature by supersonic cluster beam deposition of nanoparticles produced in the gas phase. Precise control of film roughness at the nanoscale is obtained by operating in a ballistic deposition regime. This allows one to study the influence of nanoroughness on cell adhesion, while keeping the surface chemistry constant. We evaluated cell adhesion on nanostructured zirconia with an osteoblast-like cell line using confocal laser scanning microscopy for detailed morphological and cytoskeleton studies. We demonstrated that the organization of cytoskeleton and focal adhesion formation can be controlled by varying the evolution of surface nanoroughness.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2016

Scale Invariant Disordered Nanotopography Promotes Hippocampal Neuron Development and Maturation with Involvement of Mechanotransductive Pathways

Carsten Schulte; Elisa Maffioli; Martino Alfredo Cappelluti; Simona Nonnis; Luca Puricelli; Jacopo Lamanna; Claudio Piazzoni; Alessandro Podestà; Cristina Lenardi; Gabriella Tedeschi; Antonio Malgaroli; Paolo Milani

The identification of biomaterials which promote neuronal maturation up to the generation of integrated neural circuits is fundamental for modern neuroscience. The development of neural circuits arises from complex maturative processes regulated by poorly understood signaling events, often guided by the extracellular matrix (ECM). Here we report that nanostructured zirconia surfaces, produced by supersonic cluster beam deposition of zirconia nanoparticles and characterized by ECM-like nanotopographical features, can direct the maturation of neural networks. Hippocampal neurons cultured on such cluster-assembled surfaces displayed enhanced differentiation paralleled by functional changes. The latter was demonstrated by single-cell electrophysiology showing earlier action potential generation and increased spontaneous postsynaptic currents compared to the neurons grown on the featureless unnaturally flat standard control surfaces. Label-free shotgun proteomics broadly confirmed the functional changes and suggests furthermore a vast impact of the neuron/nanotopography interaction on mechanotransductive machinery components, known to control physiological in vivo ECM-regulated axon guidance and synaptic plasticity. Our results indicate a potential of cluster-assembled zirconia nanotopography exploitable for the creation of efficient neural tissue interfaces and cell culture devices promoting neurogenic events, but also for unveiling mechanotransductive aspects of neuronal development and maturation.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Nanomanufacturing of titania interfaces with controlled structural and functional properties by supersonic cluster beam deposition

Alessandro Podestà; Francesca Borghi; Marco Indrieri; Simone Bovio; Claudio Piazzoni; Paolo Milani

Great emphasis is placed on the development of integrated approaches for the synthesis and the characterization of ad hoc nanostructured platforms, to be used as templates with controlled morphology and chemical properties for the investigation of specific phenomena of great relevance in interdisciplinary fields such as biotechnology, medicine, and advanced materials. Here, we discuss the crucial role and the advantages of thin film deposition strategies based on cluster-assembling from supersonic cluster beams. We select cluster-assembled nanostructured titania (ns-TiO2) as a case study to demonstrate that accurate control over morphological parameters can be routinely achieved, and consequently, over several relevant interfacial properties and phenomena, like surface charging in a liquid electrolyte, and proteins and nanoparticles adsorption. In particular, we show that the very good control of nanoscale morphology is obtained by taking advantage of simple scaling laws governing the ballistic deposition regime of low-energy, mass-dispersed clusters with reduced surface mobility.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2018

Proteomic Dissection of Nanotopography-Sensitive Mechanotransductive Signaling Hubs that Foster Neuronal Differentiation in PC12 Cells

Elisa Maffioli; Carsten Schulte; Simona Nonnis; Francesca Grassi Scalvini; Claudio Piazzoni; Cristina Lenardi; Armando Negri; Paolo Milani; Gabriella Tedeschi

Neuronal cells are competent in precisely sensing nanotopographical features of their microenvironment. The perceived microenvironmental information will be “interpreted” by mechanotransductive processes and impacts on neuronal functioning and differentiation. Attempts to influence neuronal differentiation by engineering substrates that mimic appropriate extracellular matrix (ECM) topographies are hampered by the fact that profound details of mechanosensing/-transduction complexity remain elusive. Introducing omics methods into these biomaterial approaches has the potential to provide a deeper insight into the molecular processes and signaling cascades underlying mechanosensing/-transduction but their exigence in cellular material is often opposed by technical limitations of major substrate top-down fabrication methods. Supersonic cluster beam deposition (SCBD) allows instead the bottom-up fabrication of nanostructured substrates over large areas characterized by a quantitatively controllable ECM-like nanoroughness that has been recently shown to foster neuron differentiation and maturation. Exploiting this capacity of SCBD, we challenged mechanosensing/-transduction and differentiative behavior of neuron-like PC12 cells with diverse nanotopographies and/or changes of their biomechanical status, and analyzed their phosphoproteomic profiles in these settings. Versatile proteins that can be associated to significant processes along the mechanotransductive signal sequence, i.e., cell/cell interaction, glycocalyx and ECM, membrane/f-actin linkage and integrin activation, cell/substrate interaction, integrin adhesion complex, actomyosin organization/cellular mechanics, nuclear organization, and transcriptional regulation, were affected. The phosphoproteomic data suggested furthermore an involvement of ILK, mTOR, Wnt, and calcium signaling in these nanotopography- and/or cell mechanics-related processes. Altogether, potential nanotopography-sensitive mechanotransductive signaling hubs participating in neuronal differentiation were dissected.


Journal of Physics D | 2015

Tribological coatings for complex mechanical elements produced by supersonic cluster beam deposition of metal dichalcogenide nanoparticles

Claudio Piazzoni; M Buttery; M R Hampson; E W Roberts; Caterina Ducati; Cristina Lenardi; F. Cavaliere; P. Piseri; Paolo Milani

Fullerene-like MoS2 and WS2 nanoparticles can be used as building blocks for the fabrication of fluid and solid lubricants. Metal dichalcogenide films have a very low friction coefficient in vacuum, therefore they have mostly been used as solid lubricants in space and vacuum applications. Unfortunately, their use is significantly hampered by the fact that in the presence of humidity, oxygen and moisture, the low-friction properties of these materials rapidly degrade due to oxidation. The use of closed-cage MoS2 and WS2 nanoparticles may eliminate this problem, although the fabrication of lubricant thin films starting from dichalcogenide nanoparticles is, to date, a difficult task. Here we demonstrate the use of supersonic cluster beam deposition for the coating of complex mechanical elements (angular contact ball bearings) with nanostructured MoS2 and WS2 thin films. We report structural and tribological characterization of the coatings in view of the optimization of tribological performances for aerospace applications.


bioRxiv | 2018

Neuronal Cells Confinement by Micropatterned Cluster-Assembled Dots with Mechanotransductive Nanotopography

Carsten Schulte; Jacopo Lamanna; Andrea Moro; Claudio Piazzoni; Francesca Borghi; Matteo Chighizola; Serena Ortoleva; Gabriella Racchetti; Cristina Lenardi; Alessandro Podestà; Antonio Malgaroli; Paolo Milani

The in vitro fabrication of neural networks able to simulate brain circuits and to maintain their native connectivity is of strategic importance to gain a deep understanding of neural circuit physiology and brain natural computational algorithm(s). This would also enable a wide-range of applications including the development of efficient brain-on-chip devices or brain-computer interfaces. Chemical and mechanotransductive cues cooperate to promote proper development and functioning of neural networks. Since the 80’s, controlled growth of mammalian neuronal cells on micrometric patterned chemical cues with the development of synaptic connections and electrical activity has been reported, however the role of mechanotransductive signaling on the growth/organization of neural networks has not been investigated so far. Here we report the fabrication and characterization of patterned substrates for neuronal culture with a controlled structure both at the nano- and microscale suitable for the selective adhesion of neuronal cells. Nanostructured micrometric dots were patterned on passivated cell-repellent glass substrates by supersonic cluster beam deposition of zirconia nanoparticles through stencil masks. Cluster-assembled nanostructured zirconia surfaces are characterized by nanotopographical features that can direct the maturation of neural networks by mechanotransductive signaling. Our approach produces a controlled microscale pattern of adhesive areas with predetermined nanoscale morphology. We have validated these micropatterned substrates using a neuronal cell line (PC12 cells) and cultured hippocampal neurons. While cells have been uniformly plated on the substrates, they adhered only on the nanostructured zirconia regions, remaining effectively confined inside the nanostructured dots on which they were found to grow, move and differentiate.


Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology | 2018

An Amperometric Sensor for Thiocholine Based on Cluster-Assembled Zirconia Modified Electrodes

Alexandra Raileanu; Claudio Piazzoni; Francesca Borghi; Luca Giacomo Bettini; Yosi Shacham-Diamand; Tommaso Santaniello; Paolo Milani

Here we report on the fabrication and characterization of cluster-assembled nanostructured zirconia electrodes for the electrochemical detection of enzymatically produced thiocholine. Zirconia nanostructures are produced by Supersonic Cluster Beam Deposition on thin gold films. This technique enables nanoscale control of the deposited film surface morphology, providing high active surface area for electrochemical detection of the analyte, along with high double-layer capacitance and suitable charge transfer resistance of the system. The electrochemical behavior of the electrodes has been characterized in the presence of the Potassium ferricyanide/Potassium ferrocyanide redox couple and the system performance showed to be enhanced starting from a thickness of the deposited layer of 60 nm. The electrochemical response for the oxidation of an enzymatic product was assessed by means of cyclic voltammetry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and chronoamperometry. The nanostructured zirconia film yields a good electrochemical detection of thiocholine. The limit of detection for thiocholine under working potential of 0.810-0.820 V versus reference was found to be comprised between 0.25 μM and 1.3 μM. Nanostructured electrodes, combining gold and zirconia nanoparticles can be implemented as functional transducers in biosensing devices, for example based on Acetylcholinesterase for electrochemical detection of polluting agents.


Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2016

Conversion of nanoscale topographical information of cluster-assembled zirconia surfaces into mechanotransductive events promotes neuronal differentiation

Carsten Schulte; Simona Rodighiero; Martino Alfredo Cappelluti; Luca Puricelli; Elisa Maffioli; Francesca Borghi; Armando Negri; Elisa Sogne; Massimiliano Galluzzi; Claudio Piazzoni; Margherita Tamplenizza; Alessandro Podestà; Gabriella Tedeschi; Cristina Lenardi; Paolo Milani


Applied Physics A | 2007

Nanocomposite TiN films with embedded MoS2 inorganic fullerenes produced by combining supersonic cluster beam deposition with cathodic arc reactive evaporation

Claudio Piazzoni; M. Blomqvist; Alessandro Podestà; G. Bardizza; M. Bonati; P. Piseri; Paolo Milani; C. Davies; P. Hatto; Caterina Ducati; K. Sedláčková; G. Radnóczi


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Growth mechanism of cluster-assembled surfaces: from sub-monolayer to thin film regime.

Francesca Borghi; Alessandro Podestà; Claudio Piazzoni; Paolo Milani

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Antonio Malgaroli

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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