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Dive into the research topics where G. Ulrich Nienhaus is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Ulrich Nienhaus.


ACS Nano | 2013

Polymer-Coated Nanoparticles Interacting with Proteins and Cells: Focusing on the Sign of the Net Charge

Dominik Hühn; Karsten Kantner; Christian Geidel; Stefan Brandholt; Ine De Cock; Stefaan J. Soenen; Pilar Rivera Gil; Jose-Maria Montenegro; Kevin Braeckmans; Klaus Müllen; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Markus Klapper; Wolfgang J. Parak

To study charge-dependent interactions of nanoparticles (NPs) with biological media and NP uptake by cells, colloidal gold nanoparticles were modified with amphiphilic polymers to obtain NPs with identical physical properties except for the sign of the charge (negative/positive). This strategy enabled us to solely assess the influence of charge on the interactions of the NPs with proteins and cells, without interference by other effects such as different size and colloidal stability. Our study shows that the number of adsorbed human serum albumin molecules per NP was not influenced by their surface charge. Positively charged NPs were incorporated by cells to a larger extent than negatively charged ones, both in serum-free and serum-containing media. Consequently, with and without protein corona (i.e., in serum-free medium) present, NP internalization depends on the sign of charge. The uptake rate of NPs by cells was higher for positively than for negatively charged NPs. Furthermore, cytotoxicity assays revealed a higher cytotoxicity for positively charged NPs, associated with their enhanced uptake.


Materials horizons | 2014

Protein corona formation around nanoparticles – from the past to the future

Pablo del Pino; Beatriz Pelaz; Qian Zhang; Pauline Maffre; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Wolfgang J. Parak

The protein adsorption layer (a.k.a. the “protein corona”) that forms on the surface of colloidal nanoparticles plays an important role in their interaction with living matter. Thus, characterization of the protein corona is of utmost importance for understanding how exposure to nanoparticles affects the biological responses of cells and organisms. Although a lot of experimental studies have been reported in this direction, a comprehensive picture is still missing, in particular due to the multitude of different scenarios under which experiments have been performed. In this review an analysis of existing experimental data about the protein corona, and an outline for required future work will be given. In particular we review how existing simple analytical models such as the adopted Hill model may help to extract quantitative data from such experiments such as equilibrium dissociation and kinetic coefficients. Careful quantitative assessment of equilibrium and kinetic properties would allow for a comparison of protein binding data from the vast array of engineered nanoparticles, so that basic principles could be revealed. This review outlines that the field is in dire need of more quantitative studies to further our understanding of protein corona formation and its biological consequences.


Small | 2011

One-Pot Synthesis of Near-Infrared Fluorescent Gold Clusters for Cellular Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging†

Li Shang; Naghmeh Azadfar; Florian Stockmar; Winfried Send; Vanessa Trouillet; Michael Bruns; D. Gerthsen; G. Ulrich Nienhaus

A facile strategy to synthesize water-soluble fluorescent gold nanoclusters (Au NCs) stabilized with the bidentate ligand dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA) is reported. The DHLA-capped Au NCs are characterized by UV-vis absorption spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The Au NCs possess many attractive features including ultrasmall size, bright near-infrared luminescence, high colloidal stability, and good biocompatibility, making them promising imaging agents for biomedical and cellular imaging applications. Moreover, their long fluorescence lifetime (>100 ns) makes them attractive as labels in fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) applications. As an example, the internalization of Au NCs by live HeLa cells is visualized using the FLIM technique.


ACS Nano | 2015

Surface Functionalization of Nanoparticles with Polyethylene Glycol: Effects on Protein Adsorption and Cellular Uptake

Beatriz Pelaz; Pablo del Pino; Pauline Maffre; Raimo Hartmann; Marta Gallego; Sara Rivera-Fernández; Jesús M. de la Fuente; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Wolfgang J. Parak

Here we have investigated the effect of enshrouding polymer-coated nanoparticles (NPs) with polyethylene glycol (PEG) on the adsorption of proteins and uptake by cultured cells. PEG was covalently linked to the polymer surface to the maximal grafting density achievable under our experimental conditions. Changes in the effective hydrodynamic radius of the NPs upon adsorption of human serum albumin (HSA) and fibrinogen (FIB) were measured in situ using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. For NPs without a PEG shell, a thickness increase of around 3 nm, corresponding to HSA monolayer adsorption, was measured at high HSA concentration. Only 50% of this value was found for NPs with PEGylated surfaces. While the size increase clearly reveals formation of a protein corona also for PEGylated NPs, fluorescence lifetime measurements and quenching experiments suggest that the adsorbed HSA molecules are buried within the PEG shell. For FIB adsorption onto PEGylated NPs, even less change in NP diameter was observed. In vitro uptake of the NPs by 3T3 fibroblasts was reduced to around 10% upon PEGylation with PEG chains of 10 kDa. Thus, even though the PEG coatings did not completely prevent protein adsorption, the PEGylated NPs still displayed a pronounced reduction of cellular uptake with respect to bare NPs, which is to be expected if the adsorbed proteins are not exposed on the NP surface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A far-red fluorescent protein with fast maturation and reduced oligomerization tendency from Entacmaea quadricolor (Anthozoa, Actinaria)

Jörg Wiedenmann; Andreas D. Schenk; Carlheinz Röcker; Andreas Girod; Klaus-Dieter Spindler; G. Ulrich Nienhaus

We performed the biochemical and biophysical characterization of a red fluorescent protein, eqFP611, from the sea anemone Entacmaea quadricolor cloned in Escherichia coli. With an excitation maximum at 559 nm and an emission maximum at 611 nm, the recombinant protein shows the most red-shifted emission and the largest Stokes shift of all nonmodified proteins in the green fluorescent protein family. The protein fluoresces with a high quantum yield of 0.45, although it resembles the nonfluorescent members of this protein class, as inferred from the absence of the key amino acid serine at position 143. Fluorescence is constant within the range pH 4–10. Red fluorophore maturation reaches a level of 90% after ≈12 h by passing through a green intermediate. After complete maturation, only a small fraction of the green species (less than 1%) persists. The protein has a reduced tendency to oligomerize, as shown by its monomeric appearance in SDS/PAGE analysis and single-molecule experiments. However, it forms tetramers at higher concentrations in the absence of detergent. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy reveals light-driven transitions between bright and dark states on submillisecond and millisecond time scales. Applicability of eqFP611 for in vivo labeling in eukaryotic systems was shown by expression in a mammalian cell culture.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Mg2+-dependent conformational change of RNA studied by fluorescence correlation and FRET on immobilized single molecules

Harold D. Kim; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Taekjip Ha; Jeffrey W. Orr; James R. Williamson; Steven Chu

Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) of fluorescence resonant energy transfer (FRET) on immobilized individual fluorophores was used to study the Mg2+-facilitated conformational change of an RNA three-helix junction, a structural element that initiates the folding of the 30S ribosomal subunit. Transitions of the RNA junction between open and folded conformations resulted in fluctuations in fluorescence by FRET. Fluorescence fluctuations occurring between two FRET states on the millisecond time scale were found to be dependent on Mg2+ and Na+ concentrations. Correlation functions of the fluctuations were used to determine transition rates between the two conformations as a function of Mg2+ or Na+ concentration. Both the opening and folding rates were found to vary with changing salt conditions. Assuming specific binding of divalent ions to RNA, the Mg2+ dependence of the observed rates cannot be explained by conformational change induced by Mg2+ binding/unbinding, but is consistent with a model in which the intrinsic conformational change of the RNA junction is altered by uptake of Mg2+ ion(s). This version of FCS/FRET on immobilized single molecules is demonstrated to be a powerful technique in the study of conformational dynamics of biomolecules over time scales ranging from microseconds to seconds.


Nanoscale | 2011

Facile preparation of water-soluble fluorescent gold nanoclusters for cellular imaging applications

Li Shang; René M. Dörlich; Stefan Brandholt; Reinhard Schneider; Vanessa Trouillet; Michael Bruns; D. Gerthsen; G. Ulrich Nienhaus

We report a facile strategy to synthesize water-soluble, fluorescent gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) in one step by using a mild reductant, tetrakis(hydroxymethyl)phosphonium chloride (THPC). A zwitterionic functional ligand, D-penicillamine (DPA), as a capping agent endowed the AuNCs with excellent stability in aqueous solvent over the physiologically relevant pH range. The DPA-capped AuNCs displayed excitation and emission bands at 400 and 610 nm, respectively; the fluorescence quantum yield was 1.3%. The effect of borohydride reduction on the optical spectra and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) results indicated that the AuNC luminescence is closely related to the presence of Au(I) on their surfaces. In a first optical imaging application, we studied internalization of the AuNCs by live HeLa cells using confocal microscopy with two-photon excitation. A cell viability assay revealed good biocompatibility of these AuNCs. Our studies demonstrate a great potential of DPA-stabilized AuNCs as fluorescent nanoprobes in bioimaging and related applications.


ACS Nano | 2010

Endo- and exocytosis of zwitterionic quantum dot nanoparticles by live HeLa cells.

Xiue Jiang; Carlheinz Röcker; Margit Hafner; Stefan Brandholt; René M. Dörlich; G. Ulrich Nienhaus

Uptake and intracellular transport of D-penicillamine coated quantum dots (DPA-QDs) of 4 nm radius by live HeLa cells have been investigated systematically by spinning disk and 4Pi confocal microscopies. Unlike larger nanoparticles, these small DPA-QDs were observed to accumulate at the plasma membrane prior to internalization, and the uptake efficiency scaled nonlinearly with the nanoparticle concentration. Both observations indicate that a critical threshold density has to be exceeded for triggering the internalization process. By using specific inhibitors, we showed that DPA-QDs were predominantly internalized by clathrin-mediated endocytosis and to a smaller extent by macropinocytosis. Clusters of DPA-QDs were found in endosomes, which were actively transported along microtubules toward the perinuclear region. Later on, a significant fraction of endocytosed DPA-QDs were found in lysosomes, while others were actively transported to the cell periphery and exocytosed with a half-life of 21 min.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2010

Quantitative analysis of the protein corona on FePt nanoparticles formed by transferrin binding

Xiue Jiang; Stefan Weise; Margit Hafner; Carlheinz Röcker; Feng Zhang; Wolfgang J. Parak; G. Ulrich Nienhaus

Nanoparticles are finding a rapidly expanding range of applications in research and technology, finally entering our daily life in medical, cosmetic or food products. Their ability to invade all regions of an organism including cells and cellular organelles offers new strategies for medical diagnosis and therapy (nanomedicine), but their safe use requires a deep knowledge about their interactions with biological systems at the molecular level. Upon incorporation, nanoparticles are exposed to biological fluids from which they adsorb proteins and other biomolecules to form a ‘protein corona’. These nanoparticle–protein interactions are still poorly understood and quantitative studies to characterize them remain scarce. Here we have quantitatively analysed the adsorption of human transferrin onto small (radius approx. 5 nm) polymer-coated FePt nanoparticles by using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Transferrin binds to the negatively charged nanoparticles with an affinity of approximately 26 µM in a cooperative fashion and forms a monolayer with a thickness of 7 nm. By using confocal fluorescence microscopy, we have observed that the uptake of FePt nanoparticles by HeLa cells is suppressed by the protein corona compared with the bare nanoparticles.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Structural Characterization of Irisfp, an Optical Highlighter Undergoing Multiple Photo-Induced Transformations.

Virgile Adam; Mickaël Lelimousin; Susan Boehme; Guillaume Desfonds; Karin Nienhaus; Martin J. Field; Joerg Wiedenmann; Sean McSweeney; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Dominique Bourgeois

Photoactivatable fluorescent proteins (FPs) are powerful fluorescent highlighters in live cell imaging and offer perspectives for optical nanoscopy and the development of biophotonic devices. Two types of photoactivation are currently being distinguished, reversible photoswitching between fluorescent and nonfluorescent forms and irreversible photoconversion. Here, we have combined crystallography and (in crystallo) spectroscopy to characterize the Phe-173-Ser mutant of the tetrameric variant of EosFP, named IrisFP, which incorporates both types of phototransformations. In its green fluorescent state, IrisFP displays reversible photoswitching, which involves cis–trans isomerization of the chromophore. Like its parent protein EosFP, IrisFP also photoconverts irreversibly to a red-emitting state under violet light because of an extension of the conjugated π-electron system of the chromophore, accompanied by a cleavage of the polypeptide backbone. The red form of IrisFP exhibits a second reversible photoswitching process, which may also involve cis–trans isomerization of the chromophore. Therefore, IrisFP displays altogether 3 distinct photoactivation processes. The possibility to engineer and precisely control multiple phototransformations in photoactivatable FPs offers exciting perspectives for the extension of the fluorescent protein toolkit.

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Karin Nienhaus

Sapienza University of Rome

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Li Shang

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Franz Oswald

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Wolfgang J. Parak

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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