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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Selvestrel is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Selvestrel.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Phosphate Diester and DNA Hydrolysis by a Multivalent, Nanoparticle-Based Catalyst

Renato Bonomi; Francesco Selvestrel; Valentina Lombardo; Claudia Sissi; Stefano Polizzi; Fabrizio Mancin; Umberto Tonellato; Paolo Scrimin

2-nm gold nanoclusters coated with Zn(II) complexes bearing auxiliary hydrogen bond donors act as multivalent catalysts capable of promoting the hydrolysis of model phosphate diesters with exceptional activity and inducing DNA double strand cleavage.


Nanotechnology | 2009

The cellular uptake of meta-tetra (hydroxyphenyl)chlorin entrapped in organically modified silica nanoparticles is mediated by serum proteins

Chiara Compagnin; Luca Baù; Maddalena Mognato; Lucia Celotti; Giovanni Miotto; Maria Arduini; Francesca Moret; Caterina Fede; Francesco Selvestrel; Iria Maria Rio Echevarria; Fabrizio Mancin; Elena Reddi

Nanosized objects made of various materials are gaining increasing attention as promising vehicles for the delivery of therapeutic and diagnostic agents for cancer. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) appears to offer a very attractive opportunity to implement drug delivery systems since no release of the sensitizer is needed to obtain the therapeutic effect and the design of the nanovehicle should be much easier. The aim of our study was to investigate the use of organic-modified silica nanoparticles (NPs) for the delivery of the second-generation photosensitizer meta-tetra(hydroxyphenyl)chlorin (mTHPC) to cancer cells in vitro. mTHPC was entrapped in NPs (approximately 33 nm diameter) in a monomeric form which produced singlet oxygen with a high efficiency. In aqueous media with high salt concentrations, the NPs underwent aggregation and precipitation but their stability could be preserved in the presence of foetal bovine serum. The cellular uptake, localization and phototoxic activity of mTHPC was determined comparatively in human oesophageal cancer cells after its delivery by the NPs and the standard solvent ethanol/poly(ethylene glycol) 400/water (20:30:50, by vol). The NP formulation reduced the cellular uptake of mTHPC by about 50% in comparison to standard solvent while it did not affect the concentration-dependent photokilling activity of mTHPC and its intracellular localization. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements, using NPs with mTHPC physically entrapped and a cyanine covalently linked, and ultracentrifugation experiments indicated that mTHPC is transferred from NPs to serum proteins when present in the medium. However, the coating of the NP surface with poly(ethylene glycol) largely prevented the transfer to proteins. In conclusion, mTHPC is rapidly transferred from the uncoated nanoparticles to the serum proteins and then internalized by the cells as a protein complex, irrespective of its modality of delivery.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2010

Procoagulant properties of bare and highly PEGylated vinyl-modified silica nanoparticles.

Regina Tavano; Daniela Segat; Elena Reddi; Janko Kos; Matija Rojnik; Petra Kocbek; Selma Iratni; Dietrich Scheglmann; Mario Colucci; Iria Maria Rio Echevarria; Francesco Selvestrel; Fabrizio Mancin; Emanuele Papini

AIMS Undesired alterations of the blood clotting balance may follow the intravascular injection of nanotherapeutics/diagnostics. Here, we tested the procoagulant activity of synthetic amorphous silica (SAS) and organically modified silica (ORMOSIL) nanoparticles (NPs) and whether a high-density polyethylene glycol coating minimizes these effects. MATERIALS & METHODS Hageman factor- and tissue factor-dependent activation of human blood/plasma coagulation, and binding to human monocytes, endothelial cells and platelets were quantified in vitro using naked and PEGylated ORMOSIL-NPs. Their effects were compared with those of SAS-NPs, present in many industrial products, and of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)- and small unilamellar vesicles-NPs, already approved for use in humans. RESULTS Both SAS-NPs and ORMOSIL-NPS presented a significant procoagulant activity. However, highly PEGylated ORMOSIL-NPs were particularly averse to the interaction with the soluble factors and cellular elements that may lead to intravascular blood coagulation. CONCLUSION Stealth, highly PEGylated ORMOSIL-NPs with a poor procoagulant activity can be used as starting blocks to design hemocompatible nanomedical-devices.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010

Highly PEGylated silica nanoparticles: “ready to use” stealth functional nanocarriers

Iria Rio-Echevarria; Francesco Selvestrel; Daniela Segat; Gaetano Guarino; Regina Tavano; Valerio Causin; Elena Reddi; Emanuele Papini; Fabrizio Mancin

The peculiar properties of silica nanoparticles make them well suited to the development of smart nanomaterials for medicine. Here we report a new procedure to prepare doped and PEGylated silica-based nanoparticles. Thus, a complex multifunctional system is obtained simply by a one-pot reaction followed by a straightforward purification procedure. Control of the nanoparticles final size is obtained by carefully choosing reactants and conditions. Moreover, reactive functional groups necessary to allow subsequent bioconjugation are easily introduced in the PEG coating by the same procedure. Unprecedented high-density surface coating is obtained and this successfully stabilizes the nanoparticles against aggregation both in saline solution and in the presence of serum proteins. The absence of cytotoxicity and “stealth” behaviour toward phagocytic capture by human macrophages has been demonstrated and this enables such nanosystems as candidates for the development of drug delivery agents.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2011

Proinflammatory effects of bare and PEGylated ORMOSIL-, PLGA- and SUV-NPs on monocytes and PMNs and their modulation by f-MLP

Daniela Segat; Regina Tavano; Marta Donini; Francesco Selvestrel; Iria Rio-Echevarria; Matija Rojnik; Petra Kocbek; Janko Kos; Selma Iratni; Dietrich Sheglmann; Fabrizio Mancin; Stefano Dusi; Emanuele Papini

AIMS We wanted to test the proinflammatory effects of vinyltriethoxysilane-based organically modified silica nanoparticles (ORMOSIL-NPs) in vitro on blood leukocytes. MATERIALS & METHODS Cell selectivity, cytokines/chemokines and O(2) (-) production were analyzed using nonpolyethylene glycol (PEG)ylated and PEGylated ORMOSIL-NPs, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA)-NPs and small unilamellar vesicles (SUV)-NPs. RESULTS ORMOSIL-NPs mostly bound to monocytes while other NPs to all leukocyte types similarly. Cell capture of PEGylated-NPs decreased strongly (ORMOSIL), moderately (PLGA) and weakly (SUV). Bare ORMOSIL-NPs effectively stimulated the production of IL-1β/IL-6/TNF-α/IL-8 by monocytes and of IL-8 by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). NP PEGylation inhibited such effects only partially. Formyl-methionine-leucine phenylalanine (f-MLP) further increased the release of cytokines/chemokines by monocytes/PMNs primed with bare and PEGylated ORMOSIL-NPs. PEGylated SUV-NPs, bare and PEGylated ORMOSIL- and PLGA-NPs sensitize PMNs and monocytes to secrete O(2) (-) upon f-MLP stimulation. CONCLUSION ORMOSIL-NPs are preferentially captured by circulating monocytes but stimulate both monocytes and PMNs per se or by sensitizing them to another agonist (f-MLP). PEG-coating confers stealth effects but does not completely eliminate leukocyte activation. Safe nanomedical applications require the evaluation of both intrinsic and cooperative proinflammatory potential of NPs.


Nanoscale | 2013

Targeted delivery of photosensitizers: efficacy and selectivity issues revealed by multifunctional ORMOSIL nanovectors in cellular systems

Francesco Selvestrel; Francesca Moret; Daniela Segat; Josephine H. Woodhams; Giulio Fracasso; Iria Maria Rio Echevarria; Luca Baù; Federico Rastrelli; Chiara Compagnin; Elena Reddi; Chiara Fedeli; Emanuele Papini; Regina Tavano; Alexandra Mackenzie; Melissa Bovis; Elnaz Yaghini; Alexander J. MacRobert; Silvia Zanini; Anita Boscaini; Marco Colombatti; Fabrizio Mancin

PEGylated and non-PEGylated ORMOSIL nanoparticles prepared by microemulsion condensation of vinyltriethoxy-silane (VTES) were investigated in detail for their micro-structure and ability to deliver photoactive agents. With respect to pure silica nanoparticles, organic modification substantially changes the microstructure and the surface properties. This in turn leads to a modulation of both the photophysical properties of embedded photosensitizers and the interaction of the nanoparticles with biological entities such as serum proteins. The flexibility of the synthetic procedure allows the rapid preparation and screening of multifunctional nanosystems for photodynamic therapy (PDT). Selective targeting of model cancer cells was tested by using folate, an integrin specific RGD peptide and anti-EGFR antibodies. Data suggest the interference of the stealth-conferring layer (PEG) with small targeting agents, but not with bulky antibodies. Moreover, we showed that selective photokilling of tumour cells may be limited even in the case of efficient targeting because of intrinsic transport limitations of active cellular uptake mechanisms or suboptimum localization.


Organic Letters | 2012

A Cell-Penetrating Ratiometric Nanoprobe for Intracellular Chloride

Luca Baù; Francesco Selvestrel; Maria Arduini; Ilaria Zamparo; Claudia Lodovichi; Fabrizio Mancin

NanoChlor, a nanoparticle-based fluorescent probe for chloride that is both ratiometric and capable of spontaneously penetrating neuronal cells at submillimolar concentrations, was designed and studied. NanoChlor is built on silica nanoparticles grafted with 6-methoxyquinolinium as the chloride-sensitive component and fluorescein as the reference dye. A Stern-Volmer constant of 50 M(-1) was measured in Ringers buffer at pH 7.2, and the response to chemically induced chloride currents was recorded in real time in hippocampal cells.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2013

Catastrophic inflammatory death of monocytes and macrophages by overtaking of a critical dose of endocytosed synthetic amorphous silica nanoparticles/serum protein complexes

Chiara Fedeli; Francesco Selvestrel; Regina Tavano; Daniela Segat; Fabrizio Mancin; Emanuele Papini

AIMS We tested whether phagocytic monocytes/macrophages are more susceptible than nonphagocytes to nanoparticle (NP) toxicity. MATERIALS & METHODS We compared in vitro cell death and proinflammatory cytokine production in human monocytes, macrophages, lymphocytes and HeLa cells due to synthetic amorphous silica (SiO2)-NPs in different serum concentrations and correlated them with cellular uptake and distribution. RESULTS Phagocytes were approximately ten-times more sensitive than nonphagocytes to SiO2-NPs and more effectively endocytosed SiO2-NP-serum protein nanoagglomerates, so determining their accumulation in acidic endocytic compartments well beyond a critical/cytotoxic threshold. Monocyte/macrophage death was paralleled by cytokine secretion. CONCLUSION The physiological specialization of monocytes/macrophages to effectively capture NPs may expose them to the risk of catastrophic inflammatory death upon saturation of their maximal storage capacity.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

Variations of the corona HDL:albumin ratio determine distinct effects of amorphous SiO2 nanoparticles on monocytes and macrophages in serum

Chiara Fedeli; Daniela Segat; Regina Tavano; Giorgia De Franceschi; Patrizia Polverino de Laureto; Elisa Lubian; Francesco Selvestrel; Fabrizio Mancin; Emanuele Papini

AIM We investigated monocyte and macrophage death and cytokine production induced by amorphous silica nanoparticles (SiO2-NPs) to clarify the role of defined serum corona proteins. MATERIALS & METHODS The cytotoxic proinflammatory effects of SiO2-NPs on human monocytes and macrophages were characterized in no serum, in fetal calf serum and in the presence of purified corona proteins. RESULTS In no serum and in fetal calf serum above approximately 75 µg/ml, SiO2-NPs lysed monocytes and macrophages by plasma membrane damage (necrosis). In fetal calf serum below approximately 75 µg/ml, SiO2-NPs triggered an endolysosomal acidification and caspase-1-dependent monocyte death (pyroptosis). The corona high-density lipoproteins:albumin ratio accounted for the features of the SiO2-NPs in serum. DISCUSSION Corona high-density lipoproteins are a major determinant of the differential cytotoxic action of SiO2-NPs on monocytes and macrophages.


Archives of Toxicology | 2015

PEGylation of ORMOSIL nanoparticles differently modulates the in vitro toxicity toward human lung cells

Francesca Moret; Francesco Selvestrel; Elisa Lubian; Maddalena Mognato; Lucia Celotti; Fabrizio Mancin; Elena Reddi

AbstractORganically MOdified SILica (ORMOSIL) nanoparticles (NPs) appear promising carriers for the delivery of drugs to target tissues but concerns on possible cytotoxic effects exist. Here, we studied the in vitro responses to ORMOSIL NPs in different types of human lung cells to determine the effects of polyethylene glycol (PEG) coating on NP cytotoxicity. Non-PEG NPs caused a concentration-dependent decrease of viability of all types of cells, while PEG NPs induced deleterious effects and death in carcinoma alveolar type II A549 cells but not in CCD-34Lu fibroblasts and NCI-H2347 adenocarcinoma cells. Reactive oxygen species were detected in cells incubated with PEG NPs, but their deactivation by superoxide dismutase and catalase did not protect A549 cells from death, suggesting that the oxidative stress was not the main determinant of cytotoxicity. Only in A549 cells PEG NPs modulated the transcription of genes involved in inflammation, signal transduction and cell death. Transmission electron microscopy evidenced a unique intracellular localization of PEG NPs in the lamellar bodies of A549 cells, which could be the most relevant factor leading to cytotoxicity by reducing the production of surfactant proteins and by interfering with the pulmonary surfactant system.

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