Emilie Pouget
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emilie Pouget.
Science | 2009
Emilie Pouget; Phh Paul Bomans; Jacm Jeroen Goos; Peter M. Frederik; Nico Ajm Nico Sommerdijk
Biogenic calcium carbonate forms the inorganic component of seashells, otoliths, and many marine skeletons, and its formation is directed by an ordered template of macromolecules. Classical nucleation theory considers crystal formation to occur from a critical nucleus formed by the assembly of ions from solution. Using cryotransmission electron microscopy, we found that template-directed calcium carbonate formation starts with the formation of prenucleation clusters. Their aggregation leads to the nucleation of amorphous nanoparticles in solution. These nanoparticles assemble at the template and, after reaching a critical size, develop dynamic crystalline domains, one of which is selectively stabilized by the template. Our findings have implications for template-directed mineral formation in biological as well as in synthetic systems.
Nano Letters | 2008
Thomas Delclos; Carole Aimé; Emilie Pouget; Aurélie Brizard; Ivan Huc; Marie-Hélène Delville; Reiko Oda
Diverse chiral nanometric ribbons and tubules formed by self-assembly of organic amphiphilic molecules could be transcribed to inorganic nanostructures using a novel sol-gel transcription protocol with tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) in the absence of catalyst or cosolvent. By controlling parameters such as temperature or the concentration of the different reactants, we could finely tune the morphology of the inorganic nanostructures formed from organic templates. This fine-tuning has also been achieved upon controlling the kinetics of both organic assembly formation and inorganic polycondensation. The results presented herein show that the dynamic and versatile nature of the organic gels considerably enhances the tunability of inorganic materials with rich polymorphisms.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Emilie Pouget; Phh Paul Bomans; Archan Dey; Peter M. Frederik; Nico Ajm Nico Sommerdijk
Inspired by the remarkable shapes and properties of CaCO(3) biominerals, many studies have investigated biomimetic routes aiming at synthetic equivalents with similar morphological and structural complexity. Control over the morphology of CaCO(3) crystals has been demonstrated, among other methods, by the use of additives that selectively allow the development of specific crystal faces, while inhibiting others. Both for biogenic and biomimetic CaCO(3), the crystalline state is often preceded by an amorphous precursor phase, but still limited information is available on the details of the amorphous-to-crystalline transition. By using a combination of cryoTEM techniques (bright field imaging, cryo-tomography, low dose electron diffraction and cryo-darkfield imaging), we show for the first time the details of this transition during the formation of hexagonal vaterite crystals grown in the presence of NH(4)(+) ions. The formation of hexagonal plate-like vaterite occurs via an amorphous precursor phase. This amorphous phase converts into the crystalline state through a solid state transformation in which order and morphology develop simultaneously. The mineral initially develops as polycrystalline vaterite which transforms into a single crystal directed by an NH(4)(+)-induced crystal plane that acts as a templating surface.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Hana Robson Marsden; Alexander V. Korobko; Ellen N. M. van Leeuwen; Emilie Pouget; Sandra J. Veen; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk; Alexander Kros
The formation of a noncovalent triblock copolymer based on a coiled-coil peptide motif is demonstrated in solution. A specific peptide pair (E and K) able to assemble into heterocoiled coils was chosen as the middle block of the polymer and conjugated to poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and polystyrene (PS) as the outer blocks. Mixing equimolar amounts of the polymer-peptide block copolymers PS-E and K-PEG resulted in the formation of coiled-coil complexes between the peptides and subsequently in the formation of the amphiphilic triblock copolymer PS-E/K-PEG. Aqueous self-assembly of the separate peptides (E and K), the block copolymers (PS-E and K-PEG), and equimolar mixtures thereof was studied by circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. It was found that the noncovalent PS-E/K-PEG copolymer assembled into rodlike micelles, while in all other cases, spherical micelles were observed. Temperature-dependent studies revealed the reversible nature of the coiled-coil complex and the influence of this on the morphology of the aggregate. A possible mechanism for these transitions based on the interfacial free energy and the free energy of the hydrophobic blocks is discussed. The self-assembly of the polymer-peptide conjugates is compared to that of polystyrene-b-poly(ethylene glycol), emphasizing the importance of the coiled-coil peptide block in determining micellar structure and dynamic behavior.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Christophe Tarabout; Stéphane Roux; Nicolas Fay; Emilie Pouget; Cristelle Mériadec; Melinda Ligeti; Daryl Thomas; Maarten IJsselstijn; François Besselievre; David-Alexandre Buisson; Jean-Marc Verbavatz; Michel Petitjean; Céline Valéry; Luc Perrin; Bernard Rousseau; Franck Artzner; Maïté Paternostre; Jean-Christophe Cintrat
Supramolecular self-assembly is an attractive pathway for bottom-up synthesis of novel nanomaterials. In particular, this approach allows the spontaneous formation of structures of well-defined shapes and monodisperse characteristic sizes. Because nanotechnology mainly relies on size-dependent physical phenomena, the control of monodispersity is required, but the possibility of tuning the size is also essential. For self-assembling systems, shape, size, and monodispersity are mainly settled by the chemical structure of the building block. Attempts to change the size notably by chemical modification usually end up with the loss of self-assembly. Here, we generated a library of 17 peptides forming nanotubes of monodisperse diameter ranging from 10 to 36 nm. A structural model taking into account close contacts explains how a modification of a few Å of a single aromatic residue induces a fourfold increase in nanotube diameter. The application of such a strategy is demonstrated by the formation of silica nanotubes of various diameters.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Emilie Pouget; Nicolas Fay; Erik Dujardin; Nadège Jamin; Patrick Berthault; Lionel Perrin; Anjali Pandit; Thierry Rose; Céline Valéry; Daniel Thomas; Maı̈té Paternostre; Franck Artzner
Nanofabrication by molecular self-assembly involves the design of molecules and self-assembly strategies so that shape and chemical complementarities drive the units to organize spontaneously into the desired structures. The power of self-assembly makes it the ubiquitous strategy of living organized matter and provides a powerful tool to chemists. However, a challenging issue in the self-assembly of complex supramolecular structures is to understand how kinetically efficient pathways emerge from the multitude of possible transition states and routes. Unfortunately, very few systems provide an intelligible structure and formation mechanism on which new models can be developed. Here, we elucidate the molecular and supramolecular self-assembly mechanism of synthetic octapeptide into nanotubes in equilibrium conditions. Their complex hierarchical self-assembly has recently been described at the mesoscopic level, and we show now that this system uniquely exhibits three assembly stages and three intermediates: (i) a peptide dimer is evidenced by both analytical centrifugation and NMR translational diffusion experiments; (ii) an open ribbon and (iii) an unstable helical ribbon are both visualized by transmission electron microscopy and characterized by small angle X-ray scattering. Interestingly, the structural features of two stable intermediates are related to the final nanotube organization as they set, respectively, the nanotube wall thickness and the final wall curvature radius. We propose that a specific self-assembly pathway is selected by the existence of such preorganized and stable intermediates so that a unique final molecular organization is kinetically favored. Our findings suggests that the rational design of oligopeptides can encode both molecular- and macro-scale morphological characteristics of their higher-order assemblies, thus opening the way to ultrahigh resolution peptide scaffold engineering.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2008
Geralda A.F. van Tilborg; Gustav J. Strijkers; Emilie Pouget; Chris Reutelingsperger; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk; Klaas Nicolay; Willem J. M. Mulder
Dual labeled liposomes, carrying both paramagnetic and fluorescent lipids, were recently proposed as potent contrast agents for MR molecular imaging. These nanoparticles are coated with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) to increase their blood circulation half‐life, which should allow extensive accumulation at the targeted site. To eliminate nonspecific blood pool signal from the MR images, the circulating liposomes should ideally be cleared from the circulation when sufficient target‐specific contrast enhancement is obtained. To that aim, we designed an avidin chase that allowed controlled and rapid clearance of paramagnetic biotinylated liposomes from the blood circulation in C57BL/6 mice. Avidin‐induced alterations in blood clearance kinetics and tissue distribution were studied quantitatively by determination of the Gd content in blood and tissue samples ex vivo. Intrinsic liposomal blood clearance showed bi‐exponential behavior with half‐lives t1/2α = 2.1 ± 1.1 and t1/2β = 15.1 ± 5.4 hours, respectively. In contrast, the contrast agent was cleared from the blood by the avidin infusion to <1% of the initial dose within 4 hours. Avidin‐induced liposomal blood clearance was also demonstrated in vivo by dynamic T1‐weighted MRI. The ability to rapidly clear circulating contrast agents opens up exciting possibilities to study targeting kinetics, to increase the specificity of molecular MRI and to optimize nanoparticulate contrast agent formulations. Magn Reson Med 60:1444–1456, 2008.
ACS Nano | 2014
Yutaka Okazaki; Jiaji Cheng; Dmytro Dedovets; Gregor Kemper; Marie-Hélène Delville; Marie Christine Durrieu; Hirotaka Ihara; Makoto Takafuji; Emilie Pouget; Reiko Oda
Finely tuned chiral nanometric silica fibers were synthesized based on sol-gel chemistry using organic self-assembly as a template. The optimization of the sol-gel process in acidic conditions allowed us to reduce the transcription time by a factor of 10. These nanohelices were successfully fragmented while preserving the fine internal structures from several micrometers to several hundreds of nanometers in length by a sonication method previously reported for carbon nanotubes. By carefully choosing the nature of the solvent, the sonication power, pH in the case of water, and densification of the silica walls by freeze-drying, the homogeneous and stable colloidal suspensions of individualized chiral nanometric silica ribbons with controlled length were obtained.
Physical Review E | 2011
Emilie Pouget; Eric Grelet; M. Paul Lettinga
We report on the dynamics in colloidal suspensions of stiff viral rods, called fd-Y21M. This mutant filamentous virus exhibits a persistence length 3.5 times larger than the wild-type fd-wt. Such a virus system can be used as a model system of rodlike particles for studying their self-diffusion. In this paper, the physical features, such as rod contour length and polydispersity have been determined for both viruses. The effect of viral rod flexibility on the location of the nematic-smectic phase transition has been investigated, with a focus on the underlying dynamics studied more specifically in the smectic phase. Direct visualization of the stiff fd-Y21M at the scale of a single particle has shown the mass transport between adjacent smectic layers, as found earlier for the more flexible rods. We could relate this hindered diffusion with the smectic ordering potentials for varying rod concentrations. The self-diffusion within the layers is far more pronounced for the stiff rods as compared to the more flexible fd-wt viral rod.
ACS Nano | 2017
Jiaji Cheng; Guillaume Le Saux; Jie Gao; Thierry Buffeteau; Yann Battie; P. Barois; Virginie Ponsinet; Marie-Hélène Delville; Ovidiu Ersen; Emilie Pouget; Reiko Oda
Plasmonic nanoparticles, particularly gold nanoparticles (GNPs) hold a great potential as structural and functional building blocks for three-dimensional (3D) nanoarchitectures with specific optical applications. However, a rational control of their assembly into nanoscale superstructures with defined positioning and overall arrangement still remains challenging. Herein, we propose a solution to this challenge by using as building blocks: (1) nanometric silica helices with tunable handedness and sizes as a matrix and (2) GNPs with diameter varying from 4 to 10 nm to prepare a collection of helical GNPs superstructures (called Goldhelices hereafter). These nanomaterials exhibit well-defined arrangement of GNPs following the helicity of the silica template. Strong chiroptical activity is evidenced by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy at the wavelength of the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) of the GNPs with a anisotropy factor (g-factor) of the order of 1 × 10-4, i.e., 10-fold larger than what is typically reported in the literature. Such CD signals were simulated using a coupled dipole method which fit very well the experimental data. The measured signals are 1-2 orders of magnitude lower than the simulated signals, which is explained by the disordered GNPs grafting, the polydispersity of the GNPs, and the dimension of the nanohelices. These Goldhelices based on inorganic templates are much more robust than previously reported organic-based chiroptical nanostructures, making them good candidates for complex hierarchical organization, providing a promising approach for light management and benefits in applications such as circular polarizers, chiral metamaterials, or chiral sensing in the visible range.
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French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission
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