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Featured researches published by Dehong Hu.


ACS Nano | 2009

Self-assembled TiO2-Graphene Hybrid Nanostructures for Enhanced Li-ion Insertion

Donghai Wang; Daiwon Choi; Juan Li; Zhenguo Yang; Zimin Nie; Rong Kou; Dehong Hu; Chongmin Wang; Laxmikant V. Saraf; Ji-Guang Zhang; Ilhan A. Aksay; Jun Liu

We used anionic sulfate surfactants to assist the stabilization of graphene in aqueous solutions and facilitate the self-assembly of in situ grown nanocrystalline TiO2, rutile and anatase, with graphene. These nanostructured TiO2-graphene hybrid materials were used for investigation of Li-ion insertion properties. The hybrid materials showed significantly enhanced Li-ion insertion/extraction in TiO2. The specific capacity was more than doubled at high charge rates, as compared with the pure TiO2 phase. The improved capacity at high charge-discharge rate may be attributed to increased electrode conductivity in the presence of a percolated graphene network embedded into the metal oxide electrodes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Aptamer/Graphene Oxide Nanocomplex for In Situ Molecular Probing in Living Cells

Ying Wang; Zhaohui Li; Dehong Hu; Chiann Tso Lin; Jinghong Li; Yuehe Lin

Graphene has shown fascinating applications in bionanotechnology, including DNA sensing, protein assays, and drug delivery. However, exploration of graphene with intracellular monitoring and in situ molecular probing is still at an early stage. In this regard, we have designed an aptamer-carboxyfluorescein (FAM)/graphene oxide nanosheet (GO-nS) nanocomplex to investigate its ability for molecular probing in living cells. Results demonstrate that uptake of aptamer-FAM/GO-nS nanocomplex and cellular target monitoring were realized successfully. The dramatic delivery, protection, and sensing capabilities of GO-nS in living cells indicate that graphene oxide could be a robust candidate for many biological fields, such as DNA and protein analysis, gene and drug delivering, and intracellular tracking.


ACS Nano | 2010

Ternary self-assembly of ordered metal oxide-graphene nanocomposites for electrochemical energy storage.

Donghai Wang; Rong Kou; Daiwon Choi; Zhenguo Yang; Zimin Nie; Juan Li; Laxmikant V. Saraf; Dehong Hu; Ji-Guang Zhang; Gordon L. Graff; Jun Liu; Michael A. Pope; Ilhan A. Aksay

Surfactant or polymer directed self-assembly has been widely investigated to prepare nanostructured metal oxides, semiconductors, and polymers, but this approach is mostly limited to two-phase materials, organic/inorganic hybrids, and nanoparticle or polymer-based nanocomposites. Self-assembled nanostructures from more complex, multiscale, and multiphase building blocks have been investigated with limited success. Here, we demonstrate a ternary self-assembly approach using graphene as fundamental building blocks to construct ordered metal oxide-graphene nanocomposites. A new class of layered nanocomposites is formed containing stable, ordered alternating layers of nanocrystalline metal oxides with graphene or graphene stacks. Alternatively, the graphene or graphene stacks can be incorporated into liquid-crystal-templated nanoporous structures to form high surface area, conductive networks. The self-assembly method can also be used to fabricate free-standing, flexible metal oxide-graphene nanocomposite films and electrodes. We have investigated the Li-ion insertion properties of the self-assembled electrodes for energy storage and show that the SnO2-graphene nanocomposite films can achieve near theoretical specific energy density without significant charge/discharge degradation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Photoswitchable nanoparticles enable high-resolution cell imaging: PULSAR microscopy.

Dehong Hu; Zhiyuan Tian; Wuwei Wu; Wei Wan; Alexander D. Q. Li

Beyond-diffraction-limit optical imaging of cells will reveal biological mechanisms, cellular structures, and physiological processes in nanometer scale. Harnessing the photoswitching properties of spiropyran fluorophores, we achieved nanoresolution fluorescence imaging using photoactuated unimolecular logical switching attained reconstruction (PULSAR) microscopy. The PULSAR microscope successfully resolved nanostructures and subcellular organelles when the photoswitchable nanoparticles containing spiropyran dyes were used as fluorescent probes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Enzyme-Directed Assembly of Nanoparticles in Tumors Monitored by in Vivo Whole Animal Imaging and ex Vivo Super-Resolution Fluorescence Imaging

Miao Ping Chien; Andrea S. Carlini; Dehong Hu; Christopher V. Barback; Anthony M. Rush; David J. Hall; Galya Orr; Nathan C. Gianneschi

Matrix metalloproteinase enzymes, overexpressed in HT-1080 human fibrocarcinoma tumors, were used to guide the accumulation and retention of an enzyme-responsive nanoparticle in a xenograft mouse model. The nanoparticles were prepared as micelles from amphiphilic block copolymers bearing a simple hydrophobic block and a hydrophilic peptide brush. The polymers were end-labeled with Alexa Fluor 647 dyes leading to the formation of labeled micelles upon dialysis of the polymers from DMSO/DMF to aqueous buffer. This dye-labeling strategy allowed the presence of the retained material to be visualized via whole animal imaging in vivo and in ex vivo organ analysis following intratumoral injection into HT-1080 xenograft tumors. We propose that the material is retained by virtue of an enzyme-induced accumulation process whereby particles change morphology from 20 nm spherical micelles to micrometer-scale aggregates, kinetically trapping them within the tumor. This hypothesis is tested here via an unprecedented super-resolution fluorescence analysis of ex vivo tissue slices confirming a particle size increase occurs concomitantly with extended retention of responsive particles compared to unresponsive controls.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Lipopolysaccharide Density and Structure Govern the Extent and Distance of Nanoparticle Interaction with Actual and Model Bacterial Outer Membranes

Kurt H. Jacobson; Ian L. Gunsolus; Thomas R. Kuech; Julianne M. Troiano; Eric S. Melby; Samuel E. Lohse; Dehong Hu; William B. Chrisler; Catherine J. Murphy; Galya Orr; Franz M. Geiger; Christy L. Haynes; Joel A. Pedersen

Design of nanomedicines and nanoparticle-based antimicrobial and antifouling formulations and assessment of the potential implications of nanoparticle release into the environment requires understanding nanoparticle interaction with bacterial surfaces. Here we demonstrate the electrostatically driven association of functionalized nanoparticles with lipopolysaccharides of Gram-negative bacterial outer membranes and find that lipopolysaccharide structure influences the extent and location of binding relative to the outer leaflet-solution interface. By manipulating the lipopolysaccharide content in Shewanella oneidensis outer membranes, we observed the electrostatically driven interaction of cationic gold nanoparticles with the lipopolysaccharide-containing leaflet. We probed this interaction by quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and second harmonic generation (SHG) using solid-supported lipopolysaccharide-containing bilayers. The association of cationic nanoparticles increased with lipopolysaccharide content, while no association of anionic nanoparticles was observed. The harmonic-dependence of QCM-D measurements suggested that a population of the cationic nanoparticles was held at a distance from the outer leaflet-solution interface of bilayers containing smooth lipopolysaccharides (those bearing a long O-polysaccharide). Additionally, smooth lipopolysaccharides held the bulk of the associated cationic particles outside of the interfacial zone probed by SHG. Our results demonstrate that positively charged nanoparticles are more likely to interact with Gram-negative bacteria than are negatively charged particles, and this interaction occurs primarily through lipopolysaccharides.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Photoswitchable nanoprobes offer unlimited brightness in frequency-domain imaging.

Alexander D. Q. Li; Chuanlang Zhan; Dehong Hu; Wei Wan; Jiannian Yao

A single probe has limited brightness in time-domain imaging and such limitation frequently renders individual molecules undetectable in the presence of interference or complex cellular structures. However, a single photoswitchable probe produces a signal, which can be separated from interference or noise using photoswitching-enabled Fourier transformation (PFT). As a result, the light-modulated probes can be made super bright in the frequency domain simply by acquiring more cycles in the time domain.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Localizing gene regulation reveals a staggered wood decay mechanism for the brown rot fungus Postia placenta

Jiwei Zhang; Gerald N. Presley; Kenneth E. Hammel; Jae San Ryu; Jon Menke; Melania Figueroa; Dehong Hu; Galya Orr; Jonathan S. Schilling

Significance Wood-decomposing fungi are key players in the carbon cycle and are models for making energy from lignocellulose, sustainably. Our study focuses on brown rot fungi that selectively remove carbohydrates, leaving most lignin behind. These fungi often decompose wood faster than their lignin-degrading white rot ancestors, despite losses in genes involved in plant cell wall hydrolysis. To explain brown rot, many have implicated reactive oxygen species (ROS) in facilitating hydrolysis, with microenvironmental gradients partitioning ROS from enzymes. By spatially colocalizing gene expression and enzyme activities as Postia placenta colonizes wood, we provide evidence of an oxidative-hydrolytic two-step mechanism controlled by differential expression, not microenvironments, and we highlight 549 genes (∼4% of the genome) that are upregulated during this unique pretreatment. Wood-degrading brown rot fungi are essential recyclers of plant biomass in forest ecosystems. Their efficient cellulolytic systems, which have potential biotechnological applications, apparently depend on a combination of two mechanisms: lignocellulose oxidation (LOX) by reactive oxygen species (ROS) and polysaccharide hydrolysis by a limited set of glycoside hydrolases (GHs). Given that ROS are strongly oxidizing and nonselective, these two steps are likely segregated. A common hypothesis has been that brown rot fungi use a concentration gradient of chelated metal ions to confine ROS generation inside wood cell walls before enzymes can infiltrate. We examined an alternative: that LOX components involved in ROS production are differentially expressed by brown rot fungi ahead of GH components. We used spatial mapping to resolve a temporal sequence in Postia placenta, sectioning thin wood wafers colonized directionally. Among sections, we measured gene expression by whole-transcriptome shotgun sequencing (RNA-seq) and assayed relevant enzyme activities. We found a marked pattern of LOX up-regulation in a narrow (5-mm, 48-h) zone at the hyphal front, which included many genes likely involved in ROS generation. Up-regulation of GH5 endoglucanases and many other GHs clearly occurred later, behind the hyphal front, with the notable exceptions of two likely expansins and a GH28 pectinase. Our results support a staggered mechanism for brown rot that is controlled by differential expression rather than microenvironmental gradients. This mechanism likely results in an oxidative pretreatment of lignocellulose, possibly facilitated by expansin- and pectinase-assisted cell wall swelling, before cellulases and hemicellulases are deployed for polysaccharide depolymerization.


Nano Letters | 2015

Ultrafast Imaging of Surface Plasmons Propagating on a Gold Surface

Yu Gong; Alan G. Joly; Dehong Hu; Patrick Z. El-Khoury; Wayne P. Hess

We record time-resolved nonlinear photoemission electron microscopy (tr-PEEM) images of propagating surface plasmons (PSPs) launched from a lithographically patterned rectangular trench on a flat gold surface. Our tr-PEEM scheme involves a pair of identical, spatially separated, and interferometrically locked femtosecond laser pulses. Power-dependent PEEM images provide experimental evidence for a sequential coherent nonlinear photoemission process, in which one laser source launches a PSP through a linear interaction, and the second subsequently probes the PSP via two-photon photoemission. The recorded time-resolved movies of a PSP allow us to directly measure various properties of the surface-bound wave packet, including its carrier wavelength (783 nm) and group velocity (0.95c). In addition, tr-PEEM images reveal that the launched PSP may be detected at least 250 μm away from the coupling trench structure.


Nanotoxicology | 2015

Intracellular accumulation dynamics and fate of zinc ions in alveolar epithelial cells exposed to airborne ZnO nanoparticles at the air–liquid interface

Cosmin Mihai; William B. Chrisler; Yumei Xie; Dehong Hu; Craig J. Szymanski; Ana Tolic; Jessica A. Klein; Jordan N. Smith; Barbara J. Tarasevich; Galya Orr

Abstract Airborne nanoparticles (NPs) that enter the respiratory tract are likely to reach the alveolar region. Accumulating observations support a role for zinc oxide (ZnO) NP dissolution in toxicity, but the majority of in-vitro studies were conducted in cells exposed to NPs in growth media, where large doses of dissolved ions are shed into the exposure solution. To determine the precise intracellular accumulation dynamics and fate of zinc ions (Zn2+) shed by airborne NPs in the cellular environment, we exposed alveolar epithelial cells to aerosolized NPs at the air–liquid interface (ALI). Using a fluorescent indicator for Zn2+, together with organelle-specific fluorescent proteins, we quantified Zn2+ in single cells and organelles over time. We found that at the ALI, intracellular Zn2+ values peaked 3 h post exposure and decayed to normal values by 12 h, while in submerged cultures, intracellular Zn2+ values continued to increase over time. The lowest toxic NP dose at the ALI generated peak intracellular Zn2+ values that were nearly three-folds lower than the peak values generated by the lowest toxic dose of NPs in submerged cultures, and eight-folds lower than the peak values generated by the lowest toxic dose of ZnSO4 or Zn2+. At the ALI, the majority of intracellular Zn2+ was found in endosomes and lysosomes as early as 1 h post exposure. In contrast, the majority of intracellular Zn2+ following exposures to ZnSO4 was found in other larger vesicles, with less than 10% in endosomes and lysosomes. Together, our observations indicate that low but critical levels of intracellular Zn2+ have to be reached, concentrated specifically in endosomes and lysosomes, for toxicity to occur, and point to the focal dissolution of the NPs in the cellular environment and the accumulation of the ions specifically in endosomes and lysosomes as the processes underlying the potent toxicity of airborne ZnO NPs.

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Galya Orr

Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory

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Ji-Guang Zhang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jun Liu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Patrick Z. El-Khoury

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Wayne P. Hess

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Wu Xu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jie Xiao

Battelle Memorial Institute

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James E. Evans

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Zimin Nie

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Alan G. Joly

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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