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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppino Fortunato is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppino Fortunato.


Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry | 2004

Application of strontium isotope abundance ratios measured by MC-ICP-MS for food authentication

Giuseppino Fortunato; K. Mumic; S. Wunderli; L. Pillonel; J. O. Bosset; G. Gremaud

Naturally occurring isotopes of such elements as strontium (Sr) have proved to be good tools for detecting trends in the soil-vegetation system and the tracing of a variety of objects. Multiple-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS) has been used for the precise determination of variations in the isotopic composition of Sr. The method described has been applied to the establishment of the potential and limits to determine the geographical origins of different Emmental-type cheese samples. The sample preparation consists of (i) a freeze-drying procedure to remove water, (ii) an extraction step to eliminate the fat components and to obtain the cheese casein fraction, (iii) a thermal decomposition of the latter, and (iv) a chromatographic matrix separation of the redissolved residue. The determination of the isotope abundance ratios 88Sr/86Sr, 87Sr/86Sr and 84Sr/86Sr resulted in precisions of 0.002–0.01%. Simultaneously, the ion currents for krypton (83Kr, 82Kr) and rubidium (85Rb) were measured to correct for interferences with the Sr isotopes 84, 86 and 87. These and further (argide) spectral interferences causing bias effects to the Sr isotope abundance ratios have been investigated and an adequate computational correction procedure has been assessed. The whole set of validation data has been used for the calculation of the combined standard measurement uncertainty of the isotopic abundance ratio, resulting in a value of 0.016%. Comparison of the measured 87Sr/86Sr data with thermal ionisation mass spectrometric (TIMS) results, determined on the same cheese samples, agreed within the stated measurement uncertainties, thus indicating that both the validation of the sample preparation procedures and the mass spectrometric measurements cause no evident bias effect with respect to the Sr isotope abundance values. The 87Sr/86Sr isotope abundance ratios in cheese originating from different regions (alpine, pre-alpine, Bretagne, Finland, Canada, Australia) accorded to local geological properties. No difference was found between “casein-bound” and “whole-cheese” Sr isotope abundance ratios within the stated measurement uncertainties.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2012

Fine-tuning of substrate architecture and surface chemistry promotes muscle tissue development

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.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2006

Mass discrimination during MC-ICPMS isotopic ratio measurements: investigation by means of synthetic isotopic mixtures (IRMM-007 series) and application to the calibration of natural-like zinc materials (including IRMM-3702 and IRMM-651).

Emmanuel Ponzevera; C. R. Quétel; Michael Berglund; Philip D. P. Taylor; Peter Evans; Robert D. Loss; Giuseppino Fortunato

A long known way of anchoring isotope ratio values to the SI system is by means of gravimetrically prepared isotopic mixtures. Thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) is the traditionally associated measurement technique, but multi-collector double focusing inductively coupled plasma (MC-ICP)-MS now appears to be an attractive alternative. This absolute calibration strategy necessitates that mass discrimination effects remain invariant in time and across the range of isotope ratios measured. It is not the case with MC-ICPMS and the present work illustrates, in the case of Zn isotopic measurements carried out using locally produced synthetic Zn isotope mixtures (IRMM-007 series), how this calibration strategy must be adjusted. First, variation in mass discrimination effects across the measurement sequence is propagated as an uncertainty component. Second, linear proportionality during each individual measurement between normalized mass discrimination and the average mass of the isotope ratios is used to evaluate mass discrimination for the ratios involving low abundance isotopes. Third, linear proportionality between mass discrimination and the logarithm of the isotope ratio values for n(67Zn)/n(64Zn) and n(68Zn)/n(64Zn) in the mixtures is used iteratively to evaluate mass discrimination for the same ratios in the isotopically enriched materials. Fourth, ratios in natural-like materials (including IRMM-3702 and IRMM-651) are calibrated by external bracketing using the isotopic mixtures. The relative expanded uncertainty (k = 2) estimated for n(68Zn)/n(64Zn) and n(67Zn)/n(64Zn) ratio values in the synthetic isotopic mixtures and the natural-like zinc samples was in the range of 0.034 to 0.048%. The uncertainty on the weighing (0.01%, k = 1) was the largest contributor to these budgets. The agreement between these results and those obtained with a single detector TIMS and with another MC-ICPMS further validated this work. The absolute isotope ratio values found for IRMM-3702—material also proposed as “delta 0” for δ-scale isotopic measurements—are n(66Zn)/n(64Zn) = 0.56397 (30), n(67Zn)/n(64Zn) = 0.082166 (35), n(68Zn)/n(64Zn) = 0.37519 (16), and n(70Zn)/n(64Zn) = 0.012418 (23). The derived Zn atomic weight value Ar(Zn) = 65.37777 (22) differs significantly from the current IUPAC value by Chang et al. [1]. Remeasurement, with isotopic mixtures from the IRMM-007 series, of the Zn isotope ratios in the same Chang et al. [1] material have revealed large systematic differences (1.35 (27)% per atomic mass unit) that suggest unrecognized measurement biases in their results.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2014

Covalent immobilisation of VEGF on plasma-coated electrospun scaffolds for tissue engineering applications.

Anne Géraldine Guex; D. Hegemann; Marie-Noëlle Giraud; Hendrik T. Tevaearai; A M Popa; René M. Rossi; Giuseppino Fortunato

Recent findings in the field of biomaterials and tissue engineering provide evidence that surface immobilised growth factors display enhanced stability and induce prolonged function. Cell response can be regulated by material properties and at the site of interest. To this end, we developed scaffolds with covalently bound vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and evaluated their mitogenic effect on endothelial cells in vitro. Nano- (254±133 nm) or micro-fibrous (4.0±0.4 μm) poly(ɛ-caprolactone) (PCL) non-wovens were produced by electrospinning and coated in a radio frequency (RF) plasma process to induce an oxygen functional hydrocarbon layer. Implemented carboxylic acid groups were converted into amine-reactive esters and covalently coupled to VEGF by forming stable amide bonds (standard EDC/NHS chemistry). Substrates were analysed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), enzyme-linked immuno-assays (ELISA) and immunohistochemistry (anti-VEGF antibody and VEGF-R2 binding). Depending on the reaction conditions, immobilised VEGF was present at 127±47 ng to 941±199 ng per substrate (6mm diameter; concentrations of 4.5 ng mm(-2) or 33.3 ng mm(-2), respectively). Immunohistochemistry provided evidence for biological integrity of immobilised VEGF. Endothelial cell number of primary endothelial cells or immortalised endothelial cells were significantly enhanced on VEGF-functionalised scaffolds compared to native PCL scaffolds. This indicates a sustained activity of immobilised VEGF over a culture period of nine days. We present a versatile method for the fabrication of growth factor-loaded scaffolds at specific concentrations.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2014

Plasma-functionalized electrospun matrix for biograft development and cardiac function stabilization

Anne Géraldine Guex; Aurélien Frobert; Jérémy Valentin; Giuseppino Fortunato; Dirk Hegemann; Stéphane Cook; Thierry Carrel; Hendrik T. Tevaearai; Marie-Noëlle Giraud

Cardiac tissue engineering approaches can deliver large numbers of cells to the damaged myocardium and have thus increasingly been considered as a possible curative treatment to counteract the high prevalence of progressive heart failure after myocardial infarction (MI). Optimal scaffold architecture and mechanical and chemical properties, as well as immune- and bio-compatibility, need to be addressed. We demonstrated that radio-frequency plasma surface functionalized electrospun poly(ɛ-caprolactone) (PCL) fibres provide a suitable matrix for bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) cardiac implantation. Using a rat model of chronic MI, we showed that MSC-seeded plasma-coated PCL grafts stabilized cardiac function and attenuated dilatation. Significant relative decreases of 13% of the ejection fraction (EF) and 15% of the fractional shortening (FS) were observed in sham treated animals; respective decreases of 20% and 25% were measured 4 weeks after acellular patch implantation, whereas a steadied function was observed 4 weeks after MSC-patch implantation (relative decreases of 6% for both EF and FS).


Textile Research Journal | 2015

Preparation and characterization of thermally stable polyimide membranes by electrospinning for protective clothing applications

Diana Serbezeanu; Ana Maria Popa; Timea Stelzig; Ion Sava; René M. Rossi; Giuseppino Fortunato

The aim of the present study was to obtain high-performance materials for heat and flame protective clothing. Therefore, hybrid membranes were prepared using Kevlar as support and aromatic polyimide nanofibers as a protective coating. The exceptional performances of the prepared membranes were highlighted by selected indicators: high thermal stability, fire resistance and improvement in air permeability without modifying drastically the water vapor transmission rate properties. Attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were employed to confirm polyimide formation. The ability of polyimide to form fibers was investigated by rheological measurements and scanning electron microscopy, respectively. Thermal degradation was studied using thermogravimetric analysis and a microscale combustion calorimeter. The transport properties of the materials were examined by air permeability, water vapor transmission rate and water resistance. It was shown that transport properties of the modified Kevlar membranes could be controlled by varying the spinning time of polyimide solution. Moreover, by annealing the modified Kevlar weavings at 260℃, the structural integrity and transport properties were not affected, whereas a higher resistance to water was found.


ChemPhysChem | 2012

Iron Resonant Photoemission Spectroscopy on Anodized Hematite Points to Electron Hole Doping during Anodization

Artur Braun; Qianli Chen; Dorota Flak; Giuseppino Fortunato; Krisztina Gajda-Schrantz; Michael Grätzel; Thomas Graule; Jinghua Guo; Tzu Wen Huang; Zhi Liu; Anastasiya V. Popelo; Kevin Sivula; H. Wadati; Pradeep P. Wyss; Liang Zhang; Junfa Zhu

Anodization of α-Fe(2)O(3) (hematite) electrodes in alkaline electrolyte under constant potential conditions the electrode surface in a way that an additional current wave occurs in the cyclic voltammogram. The energy position of this current wave is closely below the potential of the anodization treatment. Continued cycling or exchanging of the electrolyte causes depletion of this new feature. The O 1s and Fe 2p core-level X-ray photoelectron spectra (XPS) and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectra of such conditioned hematite exhibit a chemical shift towards higher binding energies, in line with the general perception that anodization generates oxide species with dielectric properties. The valence band XPS and particularly the iron resonant valence band photoemission spectra, however, are shifted towards the opposite direction, that is, towards the Fermi energy, suggesting that hole doping on hematite has taken place during anodization. Quantitative analysis of the Fe 2p resonant valence band photoemission spectra shows that the spectra obtained at the Fe 2p absorption threshold are shifted by virtually the same energy as the anodization potential towards the Fermi energy. The tentative interpretation of this observation is that anodization forms a surface film on the hematite that is specific to the anodization potential.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2016

A facile nonpolar organic solution process of a nanostructured hematite photoanode with high efficiency and stability for water splitting

Jian-Jun Wang; Yelin Hu; Rita Toth; Giuseppino Fortunato; Artur Braun

We present a facile nonpolar organic solution synthesis and processing method for water splitting photoanodes based on iron oxide with a relatively low sintering temperature (550 °C). The photocurrent of these photoanodes can reach 3.3 mA cm−2 at 1.23 V vs. RHE with high IPCE and stability, which makes them highly attractive candidate photoanodes for hydrogen generation.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

General Protocol for the Culture of Cells on Plasma-Coated Electrospun Scaffolds

A. Géraldine Guex; Giuseppino Fortunato; Dirk Hegemann; Hendrik T. Tevaearai; Marie-Noëlle Giraud

As opposed to culture on standard tissue-treated plastic, cell culture on three-dimensional scaffolds impedes additional challenges with respect to substrate preparation, cell seeding, culture maintenance, and analysis. We herewith present a general route for the culture of primary cells, differentiated cells, or stem cells on plasma-coated, electrospun scaffolds. We describe a method to prepare and fix the scaffolds in culture wells and discuss a convenient method for cell seeding and subsequent analysis by scanning electron microscopy or immunohistology.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2013

Redox cycling for passive modification of polypyrrole surface properties: effects on cell adhesion and proliferation.

Kartik M. Sivaraman; Berna Özkale; Olgaç Ergeneman; Tessa Lühmann; Giuseppino Fortunato; Muhammad A. Zeeshan; Bradley J. Nelson; Salvador Pané

The surface properties of electrodeposited poly(pyrrole) (Ppy) doped with sodium dodecylbenzenesulphonate (NaDBS) are modified by two methods: addition of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) during the electrodeposition and through redox cycling post electrodeposition. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was used to ascertain PEG incorporation and to analyze the change in the oxidation state of the polymer. Anodic cycling resulted in the formation of micrometer-sized surface cracks which increased the amount of Rhodamine-B dye adsorbed onto the surface, and played a role in decreasing the wettability of the surface. The change in surface wettability caused by these cracks was mitigated by the presence of PEG in the Ppy matrix. Compared to the incorporation of PEG, redox cycling was more effective in passively modulating the adhesion of NIH 3T3 fibroblast cells on the Ppy surface. Based on the attenuation of surface polarity of the Ppy surfaces by the incorporated PEG, a mechanism is proposed to explain the observed cell adhesion behavior.

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René M. Rossi

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Katharina Maniura-Weber

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Dirk Hegemann

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Anne Géraldine Guex

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Thomas Graule

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Enrico Körner

University of St. Gallen

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Artur Braun

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Andri Vital

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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