Enrico Körner
Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Enrico Körner.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2012
Anne Géraldine Guex; F.M. Kocher; Giuseppino Fortunato; Enrico Körner; Dirk Hegemann; Thierry Carrel; Hendrik T. Tevaearai; Marie-Noëlle Giraud
Tissue engineering has been increasingly brought to the scientific spotlight in response to the tremendous demand for regeneration, restoration or substitution of skeletal or cardiac muscle after traumatic injury, tumour ablation or myocardial infarction. In vitro generation of a highly organized and contractile muscle tissue, however, crucially depends on an appropriate design of the cell culture substrate. The present work evaluated the impact of substrate properties, in particular morphology, chemical surface composition and mechanical properties, on muscle cell fate. To this end, aligned and randomly oriented micron (3.3±0.8 μm) or nano (237±98 nm) scaled fibrous poly(ε-caprolactone) non-wovens were processed by electrospinning. A nanometer-thick oxygen functional hydrocarbon coating was deposited by a radio frequency plasma process. C2C12 muscle cells were grown on pure and as-functionalized substrates and analysed for viability, proliferation, spatial orientation, differentiation and contractility. Cell orientation has been shown to depend strongly on substrate architecture, being most pronounced on micron-scaled parallel-oriented fibres. Oxygen functional hydrocarbons, representing stable, non-immunogenic surface groups, were identified as strong triggers for myotube differentiation. Accordingly, the highest myotube density (28±15% of total substrate area), sarcomeric striation and contractility were found on plasma-coated substrates. The current study highlights the manifold material characteristics to be addressed during the substrate design process and provides insight into processes to improve bio-interfaces.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
Dirk Hegemann; Enrico Körner; Noémi E. Blanchard; Martin Drabik; Sébastien Guimond
Functional plasma polymers were deposited from pure ethylene discharges and with the addition of carbon dioxide or ammonia. The incorporation of oxygen and nitrogen-containing functional groups depends on the fragmentation in the gas phase as well as on the densification during film growth. While a minimum energy per deposited carbon atom is required for cross-linking, the densification and accompanying reduction of functional group incorporation was found to scale linearly with momentum transfer through ion bombardment during film growth.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2011
Stefanie Lischer; Enrico Körner; Dawn J. Balazs; Dakang Shen; Peter Wick; Kathrin Grieder; Dieter Haas; Manfred Heuberger; Dirk Hegemann
Biomaterials releasing silver (Ag) are of interest because of their ability to inhibit pathogenic bacteria including antibiotic-resistant strains. In order to investigate the potential of nanometre-thick Ag polymer (Ag/amino-hydrocarbon) nanocomposite plasma coatings, we studied a comprehensive range of factors such as the plasma deposition process and Ag cation release as well as the antibacterial and cytocompatible properties. The nanocomposite coatings released most bound Ag within the first day of immersion in water yielding an antibacterial burst. The release kinetics correlated with the inhibitory effects on the pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Staphylococcus aureus and on animal cells that were in contact with these coatings. We identified a unique range of Ag content that provided an effective antibacterial peak release, followed by cytocompatible conditions soon thereafter. The control of the in situ growth conditions for Ag nanoparticles in the polymer matrix offers the possibility to produce customized coatings that initially release sufficient quantities of Ag ions to produce a strong adjacent antibacterial effect, and at the same time exhibit a rapidly decaying Ag content to provide surface cytocompatibility within hours/days. This approach seems to be favourable with respect to implant surfaces and possible Ag-resistance/tolerance built-up.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
Dirk Hegemann; Enrico Körner; Shang Chen; Jan Benedikt; Achim von Keudell
Capacitively and inductively coupled plasmas were investigated in order to deposit functional plasma polymers. Considering plasma chemical and surface processes, comparable films can be obtained with both plasma sources yielding distinctly higher deposition rates for ICP. While the gas phase processes scaled with the energy input into the plasma, the surface processes were controlled by the energy dissipated during film growth (ion bombardment).
Biofouling | 2011
Jasmin Gattlen; Manfred Zinn; Sébastien Guimond; Enrico Körner; Caroline Amberg; Laurie Mauclaire
Yeast biofilms contribute to quality impairment of industrial processes and also play an important role in clinical infections. Little is known about biofilm formation and their treatment. The aim of this study was to establish a multi-layer yeast biofilm model using a modified 3.7 l bench-top bioreactor operated in continuous mode (D = 0.12 h−1). The repeatability of biofilm formation was tested by comparing five bioprocesses with Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, a strain isolated from washing machines. The amount of biofilm formed after 6 days post inoculation was 83 μg cm−2 protein, 197 μg cm−2 polysaccharide and 6.9 × 106 CFU cm−2 on smooth polypropylene surfaces. Roughening the surface doubled the amount of biofilm but also increased its spatial variability. Plasma modification of polypropylene significantly reduced the hydrophobicity but did not enhance cell attachment. The biofilm formed on polypropylene coupons could be used for sanitation studies.
Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing | 2012
Enrico Körner; Barbara Hanselmann; Peter Cierniak; Dirk Hegemann
Combining a functional plasma polymer matrix with antibacterially active silver (Ag) within a nanocomposite structure allows secure production and applications in various fields, especially in the medical sector. Therefore, nitrogen or oxygen containing hydrocarbon plasma polymers and Ag nanoparticles were simultaneously deposited. Functional groups such as amino or carboxylic groups as well as an adjusted amount of Ag can be incorporated into the growing films by controlling the plasma deposition properties. For this purpose, macroscopic kinetics were used to characterise the deposition behaviour also as a base for possible industrial up-scaling. XPS and ICP-OES were used to analyse the chemical composition of the polymer–Ag nanocomposites and the Ag content which could be incorporated depending on the plasma process conditions. Finally, the Ag release was determined in bi-distilled water for classification and comparison with the antibacterial properties. The antibacterial effect of the polymer–Ag nanocomposites was proofed with the gram− strain Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 and the gram+ strain Staphylococcus aureus (ST12 Group) showing a clear efficacy dependence on the amount of released Ag and the possibility for tailor-made antibacterial active plasma films.
Plasma Processes and Polymers | 2010
Enrico Körner; Myriam H. Aguirre; Giuseppino Fortunato; Axel Ritter; Jürgen Rühe; Dirk Hegemann
Plasma Processes and Polymers | 2011
Dirk Hegemann; Urs Schütz; Enrico Körner
Surface & Coatings Technology | 2011
Sébastien Guimond; Urs Schütz; Barbara Hanselmann; Enrico Körner; Dirk Hegemann
Plasma Processes and Polymers | 2013
Jason D. Whittle; Robert D. Short; David A. Steele; James W. Bradley; Paul M. Bryant; Faiq Jan; Hynek Biederman; Anton Serov; Andrew L. Hook; Winston Ciridon; Giacomo Ceccone; Dirk Hegemann; Enrico Körner; Andrew Michelmore
Collaboration
Dive into the Enrico Körner's collaboration.
Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
View shared research outputs