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Dive into the research topics where Hareem Maune is active.

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Featured researches published by Hareem Maune.


ACS Nano | 2012

Broad-spectrum antimicrobial supramolecular assemblies with distinctive size and shape

Kazuki Fukushima; Jeremy P. K. Tan; Peter A. Korevaar; Yi Yan Yang; Jed W. Pitera; Alshakim Nelson; Hareem Maune; Daniel J. Coady; Jane Frommer; Amanda C. Engler; Yuan Huang; Kaijin Xu; Zhongkang Ji; Yuan Qiao; Weimin Fan; Lanjuan Li; Nikken Wiradharma; E. W. Meijer; James L. Hedrick

With the increased prevalence of antibiotic-resistant infections, there is an urgent need for innovative antimicrobial treatments. One such area being actively explored is the use of self-assembling cationic polymers. This relatively new class of materials was inspired by biologically pervasive cationic host defense peptides. The antimicrobial action of both the synthetic polymers and naturally occurring peptides is believed to be complemented by their three-dimensional structure. In an effort to evaluate shape effects on antimicrobial materials, triblock polymers were polymerized from an assembly directing terephthalamide-bisurea core. Simple changes to this core, such as the addition of a methylene spacer, served to direct self-assembly into distinct morphologies-spheres and rods. Computational modeling also demonstrated how subtle core changes could directly alter urea stacking motifs manifesting in unique multidirectional hydrogen-bond networks despite the vast majority of material consisting of poly(lactide) (interior block) and cationic polycarbonates (exterior block). Upon testing the spherical and rod-like morphologies for antimicrobial properties, it was found that both possessed broad-spectrum activity (Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria as well as fungi) with minimal hemolysis, although only the rod-like assemblies were effective against Candida albicans.


Nature Communications | 2013

Supramolecular high-aspect ratio assemblies with strong antifungal activity

Kazuki Fukushima; Shaoqiong Liu; Hong Wu; Amanda C. Engler; Daniel J. Coady; Hareem Maune; Jed W. Pitera; Alshakim Nelson; Nikken Wiradharma; Shrinivas Venkataraman; Yuan Huang; Weimin Fan; Jackie Y. Ying; Yi Yan Yang; James L. Hedrick

Efficient and pathogen-specific antifungal agents are required to mitigate drug resistance problems. Here we present cationic small molecules that exhibit excellent microbial selectivity with minimal host toxicity. Unlike typical cationic polymers possessing molecular weight distributions, these compounds have an absolute molecular weight aiding in isolation and characterization. However, their specific molecular recognition motif (terephthalamide-bisurea) facilitates spontaneous supramolecular self-assembly manifesting in several polymer-like properties. Computational modelling of the terephthalamide-bisurea structures predicts zig-zag or bent arrangements where distal benzyl urea groups stabilize the high-aspect ratio aqueous supramolecular assemblies. These nanostructures are confirmed by transmission electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. Antifungal activity against drug-sensitive and drug-resistant strains with in vitro and in vivo biocompatibility is observed. Additionally, despite repeated sub-lethal exposures, drug resistance is not induced. Comparison with clinically used amphotericin B shows similar antifungal behaviour without any significant toxicity in a C. albicans biofilm-induced mouse keratitis model.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Erratum: Biotemplating pores with size and shape diversity for Li-oxygen Battery Cathodes

Dahyun Oh; Cagla Ozgit-Akgun; Esin Akca; Leslie E. Thompson; Loza Tadesse; Ho-Cheol Kim; Gökhan Demirci; Robert D. Miller; Hareem Maune

Synthetic porogens provide an easy way to create porous structures, but their usage is limited due to synthetic difficulties, process complexities and prohibitive costs. Here we investigate the use of bacteria, sustainable and naturally abundant materials, as a pore template. The bacteria require no chemical synthesis, come in variable sizes and shapes, degrade easier and are approximately a million times cheaper than conventional porogens. We fabricate free standing porous multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) films using cultured, harmless bacteria as porogens, and demonstrate substantial Li-oxygen battery performance improvement by porosity control. Pore volume as well as shape in the cathodes were easily tuned to improve oxygen evolution efficiency by 30% and double the full discharge capacity in repeated cycles compared to the compact MWCNT electrode films. The interconnected pores produced by the templates greatly improve the accessibility of reactants allowing the achievement of 4,942 W/kg (8,649 Wh/kg) at 2 A/ge (1.7 mA/cm2).


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2017

DNA-Directed Self-Assembly of Highly Ordered and Dense Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Arrays

Hareem Maune; Si-Ping Han

Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT or CNT) have unique and well-known high-performance material properties that can enable revolutionary increases in the performance of electronic devices and architectures. However, fabrication of large-scale SWNT-based ICs is an enormously challenging, unsolved problem, and self-assembly is likely needed for critical steps. Over the past several years, methods have been introduced to created ordered carbon nanotube structures using DNA guided self-assembly. In this chapter, we briefly review the challenges involved in using DNA to assemble SWNT nanostructures, and then give detailed methods to assemble dense, aligned SWNT arrays. In particular, we discuss the preparation of DNA wrapped single-walled nanotubes (DNA-CNTs) using commercial carbon nanotube products that are suitable for electronics applications. Then, we discuss methods to characterize DNA-CNTs using fluid mode atomic force microscopy (AFM). Finally, we give detailed procedures for assembly of DNA-CNTs into dense parallel arrays via linker induced surface assembly (LISA).


Macromolecules | 2015

Dual-Responsive Hydrogels for Direct-Write 3D Printing

Musan Zhang; Ankit Vora; Wei Han; Rudy J. Wojtecki; Hareem Maune; Alexander B. A. Le; Leslie E. Thompson; Gary M. McClelland; Federico Ribet; Amanda C. Engler; Alshakim Nelson


Macromolecules | 2013

Formation of Disk- and Stacked-Disk-like Self-Assembled Morphologies from Cholesterol-Functionalized Amphiphilic Polycarbonate Diblock Copolymers

Shrinivas Venkataraman; Ashlynn L. Z. Lee; Hareem Maune; James L. Hedrick; Vivek M. Prabhu; Yi Yan Yang


Archive | 2011

Carbon field effect transistors having charged monolayers to reduce parasitic resistance

Hsin-Ying Chiu; Shu-Jen Han; Hareem Maune


Archive | 2012

Methods of forming nanoparticles using semiconductor manufacturing infrastructure

Joy Cheng; Daniel J. Coady; Matthew E. Colburn; Blake Davis; James L. Hedrick; Steven J. Holmes; Hareem Maune; Alshakim Nelson


Archive | 2017

HYDROGEL COMPOSITIONS FOR DIRECT-WRITE PRINTING APPLICATIONS

Amanda C. Engler; Wei Han; Hareem Maune; Alshakim Nelson; Ankit Vora; Rudy J. Wojtecki; Mu San Zhang


Small | 2013

Formation of Disk- and Stacked Disk-Like Self-Assembled Morphologies from Cholesterol Functionalized Aliphatic Polycarbonate Containing Amphiphilic Diblock Copolymers

Vivek M. Prabhu; Shrinivas Venkataraman; Ashlynn L. Z. Lee; Yi Yan Yang; James L. Hedrick; Hareem Maune

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