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Dive into the research topics where D. Majolino is active.

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Featured researches published by D. Majolino.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Evidence of the existence of the low-density liquid phase in supercooled, confined water

Francesco Mallamace; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; Antonio Faraone; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti; Li Liu; Chung-Yuan Mou; Sow-Hsin Chen

By confining water in a nanoporous structure so narrow that the liquid could not freeze, it is possible to study properties of this previously undescribed system well below its homogeneous nucleation temperature TH = 231 K. Using this trick, we were able to study, by means of a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, vibrational spectra (HOH bending and OH-stretching modes) of deeply supercooled water in the temperature range 183 < T < 273 K. We observed, upon decreasing temperature, the building up of a new population of hydrogen-bonded oscillators centered around 3,120 cm−1, the contribution of which progressively dominates the spectra as one enters into the deeply supercooled regime. We determined that the fractional weight of this spectral component reaches 50% just at the temperature, TL ≈ 225 K, where the confined water shows a fragile-to-strong dynamic cross-over phenomenon [Ito, K., Moynihan, C. T., Angell, C. A. (1999) Nature 398:492–494]. Furthermore, the fact that the corresponding OH stretching spectral peak position of the low-density-amorphous solid water occurs exactly at 3,120 cm−1 [Sivakumar, T. C., Rice, S. A., Sceats, M. G. (1978) J. Chem. Phys. 69:3468–3476.] strongly suggests that these oscillators originate from existence of the low-density-liquid phase derived from the occurrence of the first-order liquid–liquid (LL) phase transition and the associated LL critical point in supercooled water proposed earlier by a computer molecular dynamics simulation [Poole, P. H., Sciortino, F., Essmann, U., Stanley, H. E. (1992) Nature 360:324–328].


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Role of the solvent in the dynamical transitions of proteins: The case of the lysozyme-water system

Francesco Mallamace; Sow-Hsin Chen; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; V. Crupi; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti; Piero Baglioni; Emiliano Fratini; Chiara Vannucci; H. Eugene Stanley

We study the dynamics of hydration water in the protein lysozyme in the temperature range 180 K<T<360 K using Fourier-transform-infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies. By analyzing the thermal evolution of spectra of the OH-stretching vibration modes and the NMR self-diffusion (DS) and spin-lattice relaxation time (T1), we demonstrate the existence of two dynamical transitions in the protein hydration water. Below the first transition, at about 220 K, the hydration water displays an unambiguous fragile-to-strong dynamic crossover, resulting in the loss of the protein conformational flexibility. Above the second transition, at about 346 K, where the protein unfolds, the dynamics of the hydration water appears to be dominated by the non-hydrogen-bonded fraction of water molecules.


Molecular Physics | 1995

Rayleigh wing and Fourier transform infrared studies of intermolecular and intramolecular hydrogen bonds in liquid ethylene glycol

V. Crupi; M.P. Jannelli; S. Magazù; G. Maisano; D. Majolino; P. Migliardo; D. Sirna

Depolarized low frequency light scattering and infrared data for ethylene glycol are presented. The measurements, performed in the temperature range 7–160 °C, help clarify the processes that characterize the dynamic response of the system. Rayleigh-wing data analysis suggests, through the width and intensity temperature evolution, the existence of a thermally activated process that can be rationalized in terms of a simple two-state model. The extracted activation (ΔH) and binding (ΔG) energies, have been attributed to the ‘transition’ from a gauche configuration, stabilized by an intramolecular H bond, to a simple gauche configuration. In addition, the study of the O-H stretching region, performed on ethylene glycol and on poly(ethylene glycol) by means of the Fourier transform infrared technique allows one to identify the intramolecular, H-bond imposed, sub-band, as well as to assign the various sub-bands originated by the existence of the H-bond potential. The observed dynamics are also discussed within...


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2010

Physico-chemical characterization of an amphiphilic cyclodextrin/genistein complex.

Carmela Cannavà; V. Crupi; P. Ficarra; M. Guardo; D. Majolino; Antonino Mazzaglia; Rosanna Stancanelli; Valentina Venuti

Specific recognition of cell-targeting systems as host-carriers modified with receptor targeting groups, is a major ambition in the application of supramolecular science to medicine and life science. Genistein (Gen), an isoflavone belonging to the class of phytoestrogens, is of great interest because it has been considered as potential remedy for many kinds of disease. In this work, genistein in aqueous medium and in the presence of an host nanocarrier as amphiphilic cyclodextrin (CyD) modified in the upper rim with oligoethylene hydroxyl groups [(2-oligo(ethyleneoxide)-6-hexylthio)-beta-CyD, SC6OH] at 1:1 molar ratio, has been firstly investigated by UV-vis measurements coupled with circular dichroism data, in order to characterize the drug/macrocycle binding affinity through the formation of the complex. Furthermore, FTIR-ATR technique has been used to detect the complex formation in solid phase and to characterize the functional groups responsible of the solid Gen/SC6OH complex stability. The infrared absorbance spectra of the complex, collected in a wide range of wavenumber and around the physiological temperature, have been analysed and compared with the spectra of the pure compounds and their physical mixture. By monitoring the most significant changes in the shape and position of the absorbance bands of the Gen functional groups, we showed that the formation and/or modification of polar bonds play the main role in the interaction of the drug with the amphiphilic CyD. From the results, Gen is shown to be entangled in SC6OH nanoaggregates, establishing hydrogen bonding with the hydrophilic PEG chains.


Molecular Physics | 1993

Sound velocity and hydration phenomena in aqueous polymeric solutions

G. Maisano; D. Majolino; P. Migliardo; S. Venuto; F. Aliotta; S. Magazù

Sound velocity and density measurements were performed in polymeric aqueous solutions of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG 600) and poly(ethylene glycol methyl ether) (PEGME 550) as a function of concentration and temperature. The experimental data unambiguously show that the presence of the polymer changes the water structure near the solute, building up a more compact arrangement in which up to two water molecules for each monomeric unity are allowed. Moreover we tested, at low concentration, a model to study the change induced in the polymer hydration by the addition of salt. No direct evidence of interaction between the hydration water of the polymer and salt is brought to light by the obtained results.


Molecular Physics | 2003

Structure and dynamics of water confined in a nanoporous sol-gel silica glass: a neutron scattering study

V. Crupi; D. Majolino; P. Migliardo; Valentina Venuti; Marie-Claire Bellissent-Funel

During recent years, the understanding of the modification of the structure and dynamics of water confined in different environments has been the focus of much interest in scientific research. This topic is in fact of great relevance in a lot of technological areas and, in living systems, essential water-related phenomena occur in restricted geometries in cells, and active sites of proteins and membranes, or at their surface. In this paper we report on the most recent up to date account of structural and dynamical properties of confined water in comparison with the bulk state. In particular, as far as structure is concerned, we present new neutron diffraction results on heavy water confined in a fully hydrated sol-gel silica glass (GelSil) as a function of the temperature. At low T, the nucleation of cubic ice superimposed to liquid water, already observed for water within Vycor glasses, is discussed. As far as the dynamics is concerned, we report results of a detailed spectroscopic analysis of diffusive relaxation and vibrational properties of water confined in nanopores of Gelsil glass, at different temperatures and hydration percentages, performed by our research group during recent years by means of incoherent quasi-elastic (IQENS) and inelastic (IINS) neutron scattering. IQENS spectra are analysed in the framework of the relaxing cage model (RCM). IINS spectra show the evolution of the one-phonon-amplitude weighted proton vibrational density of states (VDOS), Z(ω), when water loses its peculiar bulk properties and originates new structural environments due to its surface interactions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Temperature Effect on the Vibrational Dynamics of Cyclodextrin Inclusion Complexes: Investigation by FTIR-ATR Spectroscopy and Numerical Simulation

V. Crupi; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti; Graziano Guella; Ines Mancini; Barbara Rossi; Paolo Verrocchio; G. Viliani; Rosanna Stancanelli

The vibrational dynamics of solid inclusion complexes of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug Ibuprofen (IBP) with beta-cyclodextrin (beta-CD) and methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (Me-beta-CD) has been investigated by using attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared FTIR-ATR spectroscopy, in order to monitor the changes induced, as a consequence of complexation, on the vibrational spectrum of IBP, in the wavenumber range 600-4000 cm(-1). Quantum chemical calculations were performed on monomeric and dimeric structures of IBP, derived from symmetric hydrogen bonding of the two carboxylic groups, in order to unambiguously assign some characteristic IR bands in the IBP spectrum. The evolution in temperature from 250 to 340 K of the C horizontal lineO stretching vibration, described by a best-fit procedure, allowed us to extract the thermodynamic parameter DeltaH associated to the binding of IBP with betaCDs in the solid phase. By comparing these results, Me-beta-CD has been shown to be the most effective carrier for IBP.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Effect of Cross-Linking Properties on the Vibrational Dynamics of Cyclodextrins-Based Polymers: An Experimental–Numerical Study

Franca Castiglione; V. Crupi; D. Majolino; Andrea Mele; Barbara Rossi; Francesco Trotta; Valentina Venuti

The vibrational dynamics of cyclodextrin nanosponges (CDNS), a new class of nanostructured soft materials synthesized via cross-linking reaction of natural cyclic oligosaccharide β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) with suitable organic reagents, is investigated by means of the combined use of Raman and infrared spectroscopy, supported by numerical simulations. The vibrational spectra of the polymers show significant changes in the frequency ranges 3000-3700 and 1500-1800 cm(-1) correlated to the relative amount of cross-linker with respect to monomeric CD. By using band deconvolution and best-fit procedure of the experimental data and quantum chemical computations, a correlation between such changes and the degree of cross-linking of the polymeric network is proposed. This experimental-numerical approach, here applied to a model class of nanoporous polymeric systems, appears to be of general application for the study of polymeric matrixes of interest for biolife applications.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1998

DYNAMIC EVIDENCE OF CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL TRAPS IN H-BONDED CONFINED LIQUIDS

V. Crupi; G. Maisano; D. Majolino; P. Migliardo; Valentina Venuti

Rayleigh wing, infrared (IR) absorption, and Raman-scattering measurements are employed to investigate the reorientational and vibrational dynamics of ethylene glycol and its homologous systems, namely ethylene glycol monomethyl ether and ethylene glycol dimethyl ether, in the bulk state and confined into 25 A pores of a sol-gel porous glass. As far as the Rayleigh wing data are concerned, the quantitative analysis of the different contributions in the spectra shows the clear influence of the physical and chemical confinement on the mobility of the studied liquids. In addition the IR and Raman measurements, performed in the O–H stretching region, allowed to identify the intramolecular, H-bond imposed, sub-band, as well as to connect the various sub-bands to different intermolecular environments originated by the existence of the H-bond potential. The observed dynamics is discussed on the basis of current theories for associated liquids.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2008

UV–vis and FTIR-ATR characterization of 9-fluorenon-2-carboxyester/(2-hydroxypropyl)-β-cyclodextrin inclusion complex

Rosanna Stancanelli; R. Ficarra; Carmela Cannavà; M. Guardo; Maria Luisa Calabrò; P. Ficarra; R. Ottanà; R. Maccari; V. Crupi; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti

In this work, the usefulness of (2-hydroxypropyl)-beta-cyclodextrin (HP-beta-CyD) as a tool to form an inclusion complex with 9-fluorenonic derivative (AG11) has been investigated, in pure water, by UV absorption. Phase-solubility diagrams allowed the determination of the association constant between AG11 and HP-beta-CyD. At the same time, solid binary systems between AG11 and HP-beta-CyD have been prepared in 1:1 stoichiometry by co-precipitation method. In order to confirm the complexation, FTIR spectroscopy in ATR geometry measurements have been performed and the results have been compared with the free compounds and the corresponding physical mixture in the same molar ratio. The nature of the interactions between AG11 and HP-beta-CyD has been elucidated also by applying mathematical procedures such as deconvolution and curve fitting. Improvement of the aqueous solubility is expected to improve the bioavailability of the drug in oral administration.

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V. Crupi

University of Messina

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Barbara Rossi

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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