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Dive into the research topics where Freek J. M. Hoeben is active.

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Featured researches published by Freek J. M. Hoeben.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2016

Triggered Drug Release from an Antibody–Drug Conjugate Using Fast “Click-to-Release” Chemistry in Mice

Raffaella Rossin; Sander M. J. van Duijnhoven; Wolter ten Hoeve; Henk M. Janssen; Laurens H. J. Kleijn; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Ron M. Versteegen; Marc S. Robillard

The use of a bioorthogonal reaction for the selective cleavage of tumor-bound antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) would represent a powerful new tool for ADC therapy, as it would not rely on the currently used intracellular biological activation mechanisms, thereby expanding the scope to noninternalizing cancer targets. Here we report that the recently developed inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder pyridazine elimination reaction can provoke rapid and self-immolative release of doxorubicin from an ADC in vitro and in tumor-bearing mice.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Visualization of various supramolecular assemblies of oligo(para- phenylenevinylene)-melamine and perylene bisimide

Freek J. M. Hoeben; Jian Zhang; Cameron C. Lee; Maarten J. Pouderoijen; Martin Wolffs; Frank Würthner; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; E. W. Meijer; Steven De Feyter

A melamine derivative has been covalently equipped with two oligo(para-phenylenevinylene) (OPV) chromophores. This procedure yields a bifunctional molecule with two hydrogen-bonding arrays available for complementary binding to perylene bisimide derivatives. Depending on the solvent, hydrogen-bonded trimers, tetramers, and dimers on a graphite surface are observed for pure OPV-melamine by using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Upon the addition of perylene bisimide, linear tapes of perylene bisimide, 12-membered rosettes that consist of alternating hydrogen-bonded OPV-melamine and perylene bisimide moieties are visualized. These results provide direct evidence for the possible modes of hydrogen bonding within a supramolecular co-assembly in solution. Subsequently, the optical properties of pure OPV-melamine and co-assemblies with a perylene bisimide derivative were characterized in solution. In an apolar solvent, OPV-melamine self-assembles into chiral superstructures. Disassembly into molecularly dissolved species is reversibly controlled by concentration and temperature. Complementary hydrogen bonding to a perylene bisimide derivative in an apolar solvent yields multicomponent, pi-stacked dye assemblies of enhanced stability that are characterized by fluorescence quenching of the constituent chromophores. Titration experiments reveal that a mixture of hydrogen-bonded oligomers is present in solution, rather than a single discrete assembly. The solution experiments are consistent with the STM results, which revealed various supramolecular assemblies. Our system is likely not to be optimally programmed to obtain a discrete co-assembled structure in quantitative yield.


Langmuir | 2008

Polymyxin-Coated Au and Carbon Nanotube Electrodes for Stable [NiFe]-Hydrogenase Film Voltammetry

Freek J. M. Hoeben; Iddo Heller; Simon P. J. Albracht; Cees Dekker; Serge G. Lemay; Hendrik A. Heering

We report on the use of polymyxin (PM), a cyclic cationic lipodecapeptide, as an electrode modifier for studying protein film voltammetry (PFV) on Au and single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) electrodes. Pretreating the electrodes with PM allows for the subsequent immobilization of an active submonolayer of [NiFe]-hydrogenase from Allochromatium vinosum ( Av H2ase). Probed by cyclic voltammetry (CV), the adsorbed enzyme exhibits characteristic electrocatalytic behavior that is stable for several hours under continuous potential cycling. An unexpected feature of the immobilization procedure is that the presence of chloride ions is a prerequisite for obtaining electrocatalytic activity. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) relates the observed catalytic activity to enzymatic adsorption at the PM/Au(111) surface, and a combination of concentration-dependent CV and AFM is used to investigate the interaction between the enzyme and the PM layer.


Physical Review B | 2003

Exciton bimolecular annihilation dynamics in supramolecular nanostructures of conjugated oligomers

Clément Daniel; Laura M. Herz; Carlos Silva; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Pascal Jonkheijm; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; E. W. Meijer

We present femtosecond transient absorption measurements on p-conjugated supramolecular assemblies in a high-pump-fluence regime. Oligo( p-phenylenevinylene! monofunctionalized with ureido-s-triazine ~MOPV! self-assembles into chiral stacks in dodecane solution below 75 °C at a concentration of 4310 24 M. We observe exciton bimolecular annihilation in MOPV stacks at high excitation fluence, indicated by the fluencedependent decay of 1 1 Bu-exciton spectral signatures and by the sublinear fluence dependence of time- and wavelength-integrated photoluminescence ~PL! intensity. These two characteristics are much less pronounced in MOPV solution where the phase equilibrium is shifted significantly away from supramolecular assembly, slightly below the transition temperature. A mesoscopic rate-equation model is applied to extract the bimolecular annihilation rate constant from the excitation fluence dependence of transient absorption and PL signals. The results demonstrate that the bimolecular annihilation rate is very high with a square-root dependence in time. The exciton annihilation results from a combination of fast exciton diffusion and resonance energy transfer. The supramolecular nanostructures studied here have electronic properties that are intermediate between molecular aggregates and polymeric semiconductors.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Surface-Induced Diastereomeric Complex Formation of a Nucleoside at the Liquid/Solid Interface: Stereoselective Recognition and Preferential Adsorption

Zongxia Guo; Inge De Cat; Bernard Van Averbeke; Elke Ghijsens; Jianbin Lin; Hong Xu; Guojie Wang; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Zeljko Tomovic; Roberto Lazzaroni; David Beljonne; E. W. Meijer; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; Steven De Feyter

With the aim of achieving surface-mediated enantioselective adsorption, the self-assembly of chiral oligo(p-phenylenevinylene) (OPV3T) with nucleosides is investigated at the liquid/solid interface by means of scanning tunneling microscopy and molecular modeling. OPV3T enantiomers form mirror related hexameric rosette patterns. The DNA nucleoside, thymidine, does not self-assemble into stable adlayers but coadsorbs with OPV3T on the surface, leading to a pattern transformation of OPV3T from rosettes to dimers, and a change in chiral expression as well. Diastereoselective recognition between OPV3T and thymidine enantiomers can be used to resolve thymidine enantiomers at an achiral surface with an OPV3T enantiomer as the resolving agent. The impact of molar ratio and concentration on the self-assembly and chiral resolution is systematically investigated. Because there is no interaction between OPV3T and thymidine in solution, the liquid/solid interface acts as the platform for the chiral resolution of thymidine enantiomers.


Chemical Communications | 2008

Identification of oligo(p-phenylene vinylene)–naphthalene diimide heterocomplexes by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy at the liquid–solid interface

Inge De Cat; Cornelia Röger; Cameron C. Lee; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Maarten J. Pouderoijen; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; Frank Würthner; Steven De Feyter

Co-assembly of a melamine derivative covalently equipped with two oligo(p-phenylene vinylene) chromophores and a naphthalene diimide dye results in the formation of heterocomplexes at the liquid-solid interface which was shown using bias dependent imaging and scanning tunneling spectroscopy, despite the disordered nature of the assemblies.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

The effects of supramolecular assembly on exciton decay rates in organic semiconductors

Clément Daniel; François Makereel; Laura M. Herz; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Pascal Jonkheijm; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; E. W. Meijer; Richard H. Friend; Carlos Silva

We present time-resolved photoluminescence measurements on two series of oligo-p-phenylenevinylene (OPV) materials that are functionalized with quadruple hydrogen-bonding groups. These form supramolecular assemblies with thermotropic reversibility. The morphology of the assemblies depends on the way that the oligomers are functionalized; monofunctionalized OPVs (MOPVs) form chiral, helical stacks while bifunctionalized OPVs (BOPVs) form less organized structures. These are therefore model systems to investigate the effects of supramolecular assembly, the effects of morphology, and the dependence of oligomer length on the radiative and nonradiative rates of pi-conjugated materials. The purpose of this work is to use MOPV and BOPV derivatives as model systems to study the effect of intermolecular interactions on the molecular photophysics by comparing optical properties in the dissolved phase and the supramolecular assemblies. A simple photophysical analysis allows us to extract the intrinsic radiative and nonradiative decay rates and to unravel the consequences of interchromophore coupling with unprecedented detail. We find that interchromophore coupling strongly reduces both radiative and intrinsic nonradiative rates and that the effect is more pronounced in short oligomers.


Chemical Communications | 2013

Synthesis and in vitro evaluation of a multifunctional and surface-switchable nanoemulsion platform

Anita Gianella; Aneta J. Mieszawska; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Henk M. Janssen; Peter A. Jarzyna; David P. Cormode; Kevin D. Costa; Satish Rao; Omid C. Farokhzad; Robert Langer; Zahi A. Fayad; Willem J. M. Mulder

We present a multifunctional nanoparticle platform that has targeting moieties shielded by a matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP2) cleavable PEG coating. Upon incubation with MMP2 this surface-switchable coating is removed and the targeting ligands become available for binding. The concept was evaluated in vitro using biotin and αvβ3-integrin-specific RGD-peptide functionalized nanoparticles.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

NMR Nanoparticle Diffusometry in Hydrogels: Enhancing Sensitivity and Selectivity

Daan W. de Kort; John van Duynhoven; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Henk M. Janssen; Henk Van As

From the diffusional behavior of nanoparticles in heterogeneous hydrogels, quantitative information about submicron structural features of the polymer matrix can be derived. Pulsed-gradient spin-echo NMR is often the method of choice because it measures diffusion of the whole ensemble of nanoparticles. However, in (1)H diffusion-ordered spectroscopy (DOSY), low-intensity nanoparticle signals have to be separated from a highly protonated background. To circumvent this, we prepared (19)F labeled, PEGylated, water-soluble dendritic nanoparticles with a (19)F loading of ~7 wt % to enable background free (19)F DOSY experiments. (19)F nanoparticle diffusometry was benchmarked against (1)H diffusion-T2 correlation spectroscopy (DRCOSY), which has a stronger signal separation potential than the commonly used (1)H DOSY experiment. We used bootstrap data resampling to estimate confidence intervals and stabilize 2D-Laplace inversion of DRCOSY data with high noise levels and artifacts, allowing quantitative diffusometry even at low magnetic field strengths (30 MHz). The employed methods offer significant advantages in terms of sensitivity and selectivity.


Synthetic Metals | 2003

Exciton dynamics in supramolecular assemblies of p-phenylenevinylene oligomers

Laura M. Herz; Clément Daniel; Carlos Silva; Freek J. M. Hoeben; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; E. W. Meijer; Richard H. Friend; R. T. Phillips

We have investigated the dynamics of photoexcitations in chiral assemblies of p-phenylenevinylene oligomers functionalized with hydrogen-bonding motifs. In the regime of low excitation densities, the luminescence transients are influenced by the migration of excitons to defect sites, indicative of fast diffusivity of excitons along the molecular assemblies. In addition, at high excitation densities, bimolecular exciton annihilation is shown to result in the fast depopulation of the stacks’ excitonic energy levels.

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E. W. Meijer

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Albertus P. H. J. Schenning

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Pascal Jonkheijm

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Carlos Silva

Université de Montréal

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Steven De Feyter

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Maarten J. Pouderoijen

Eindhoven University of Technology

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