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Dive into the research topics where Jesper Søndergaard Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Jesper Søndergaard Hansen.


Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering | 2009

Development of an automation technique for the establishment of functional lipid bilayer arrays

Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Mark Perry; Jörg Vogel; Thomas Vissing; Christian Rein Hansen; Oliver Geschke; Jenny Emnéus; Claus Helix Nielsen

In the present work, a technique for establishing multiple black lipid membranes (BLMs) in arrays of micro structured ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE) films, and supported by a micro porous material was developed. Rectangular 8 × 8 arrays with apertures having diameters of 301 ± 5 µm were fabricated in ETFE Teflon film by laser ablation using a carbon dioxide laser. Multiple lipid membranes could be formed across the micro structured 8 × 8 array ETFE partitions. Success rates for the establishment of cellulose-supported BLMs across the multiple aperture arrays were above 95%. However, the time course of the membrane thinning process was found to vary considerably between multiple aperture bilayer experiments. An airbrush partition pretreatment technique was developed to increase the reproducibility of the multiple lipid bilayers formation during the time course from the establishment of the lipid membranes to the formation of bilayers. The results showed that multiple lipid bilayers could be reproducible formed across the airbrush-pretreated 8 × 8 rectangular arrays. The ionophoric peptide valinomycin was incorporated into established membrane arrays, resulting in ionic currents that could be effectively blocked by tetraethylammonium. This shows that functional bimolecular lipid membranes were established, and furthermore outlines that the established lipid membrane arrays could host functional membrane-spanning molecules.


Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering | 2009

A support structure for biomimetic applications

Jörg Vogel; Mark Perry; Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; P.-Y. Bolinger; Claus Helix Nielsen; Oliver Geschke

Water filtration on the basis of aquaporin molecules incorporated in an artificial lipid bilayer requires a microporous support membrane. We describe a new microfabrication method based on CO2-laser ablation to generate support membranes with homogeneous apertures ranging from 300 µm down to 84 µm in diameter. They are arranged in arrays with the densest packaging having a perforation level of up to 60%. The apertures are surrounded by a smooth bulge that is formed by melted material ejected from the aperture during laser ablation. Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) replicas were used to visualize and analyse these bulges. The overall area covered so far has been 4 cm2 but upscaling to larger footprints, e.g. square metres, is currently being investigated.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Structure and Stability of the Spinach Aquaporin SoPIP2;1 in Detergent Micelles and Lipid Membranes

Inés Plasencia; Sabeen Survery; Sania Ibragimova; Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Per Kjellbom; Claus Hélix-Nielsen; Urban Johanson; Ole G. Mouritsen

Background SoPIP2;1 constitutes one of the major integral proteins in spinach leaf plasma membranes and belongs to the aquaporin family. SoPIP2;1 is a highly permeable and selective water channel that has been successfully overexpressed and purified with high yields. In order to optimize reconstitution of the purified protein into biomimetic systems, we have here for the first time characterized the structural stability of SoPIP2;1. Methodology/Principal Finding We have characterized the protein structural stability after purification and after reconstitution into detergent micelles and proteoliposomes using circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy techniques. The structure of SoPIP2;1 was analyzed either with the protein solubilized with octyl-β-D-glucopyranoside (OG) or reconstituted into lipid membranes formed by E. coli lipids, diphytanoylphosphatidylcholine (DPhPC), or reconstituted into lipid membranes formed from mixtures of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPE), 1-palmitoyl-2oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (POPE), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylserine (POPS), and ergosterol. Generally, SoPIP2;1 secondary structure was found to be predominantly α-helical in accordance with crystallographic data. The protein has a high thermal structural stability in detergent solutions, with an irreversible thermal unfolding occurring at a melting temperature of 58°C. Incorporation of the protein into lipid membranes increases the structural stability as evidenced by an increased melting temperature of up to 70°C. Conclusion/Significance The results of this study provide insights into SoPIP2;1 stability in various host membranes and suggest suitable choices of detergent and lipid composition for reconstitution of SoPIP2;1 into biomimetic membranes for biotechnological applications.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Interaction between sodium dodecyl sulfate and membrane reconstituted aquaporins: A comparative study of spinach SoPIP2;1 and E. coli AqpZ

Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Ardcharaporn Vararattanavech; Inés Plasencia; Per Greisen; Julie Bomholt; Jaume Torres; Jenny Emnéus; Claus Hélix-Nielsen

This study describes the interaction between sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and membrane proteins reconstituted into large unilamellar lipid vesicles and detergent micelles studied by circular dichroism (CD) and polarity sensitive probe labeling. Specifically, we carried out a comparative study of two aquaporins with high structural homology SoPIP2;1 and AqpZ using identical reconstitution conditions. Our CD results indicate that SDS, when added to membrane-reconstituted aquaporins in concentrations below the SDS critical micelle concentration (CMC, ~8mM), causes helical rearrangements of both aquaporins. However, we do not find compelling evidence for unfolding. In contrast when SDS is added to detergent stabilized aquaporins, SoPIP2;1 partly unfolds, while AqpZ secondary structure is unaffected. Using a fluorescent polarity sensitive probe (Badan) we show that SDS action on membrane reconstituted SoPIP2;1 as well as AqpZ is associated with initial increased hydrophobic interactions in protein transmembrane (TM) spanning regions up to a concentration of 0.1× CMC. At higher SDS concentrations TM hydrophobic interactions, as reported by Badan, decrease and reach a plateau from SDS CMC up to 12.5× CMC. Combined, our results show that SDS does not unfold neither SoPIP2;1 nor AqpZ during transition from a membrane reconstituted form to a detergent stabilized state albeit the native folds are changed.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Assessing the efficacy of vesicle fusion with planar membrane arrays using a mitochondrial porin as reporter

Kamila Pszon-Bartosz; Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Karin Stibius; Jesper S. Groth; Jenny Emnéus; Oliver Geschke; Claus Hélix-Nielsen

Reconstitution of functionally active membrane protein into artificially made lipid bilayers is a challenge that must be overcome to create a membrane-based biomimetic sensor and separation device. In this study we address the efficacy of proteoliposome fusion with planar membrane arrays. We establish a protein incorporation efficacy assay using the major non-specific porin of Fusobacterium nucleatum (FomA) as reporter. We use electrical conductance measurements and fluorescence microscopy to characterize proteoliposome fusion with an array of planar membranes. We show that protein reconstitution in biomimetic membrane arrays may be quantified using the developed FomA assay. Specifically, we show that FomA vesicles are inherently fusigenic. Optimal FomA incorporation is obtained with a proteoliposome lipid-to-protein molar ratio (LPR)=50 more than 10(5) FomA proteins could be incorporated in a bilayer array with a total membrane area of 2mm(2) within 20 min. This novel assay for quantifying protein delivery into lipid bilayers may be a useful tool in developing biomimetic membrane applications.


ChemBioChem | 2011

Formation of giant protein vesicles by a lipid cosolvent method.

Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Ardcharaporn Vararattanavech; Thomas Vissing; Jaume Torres; Jenny Emnéus; Claus Hélix-Nielsen

This paper describes a method to create giant protein vesicles (GPVs) of ≥10 μm by solvent‐driven fusion of large vesicles (0.1–0.2 μm) with reconstituted membrane proteins. We found that formation of GPVs proceeded from rotational mixing of protein‐reconstituted large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) with a lipid‐containing solvent phase. We made GPVs by using n‐decane and squalene as solvents, and applied generalized polarization (GP) imaging to monitor the polarity around the protein transmembrane region of aquaporins labeled with the polarity‐sensitive probe Badan. Specifically, we created GPVs of spinach SoPIP2;1 and E. coli AqpZ aquaporins. Our findings show that hydrophobic interactions within the bilayer of formed GPVs are influenced not only by the solvent partitioning propensity, but also by lipid composition and membrane protein isoform.


Bioinspiration & Biomimetics | 2009

Automated sampling and data processing derived from biomimetic membranes

Mark Perry; Thomas Vissing; Thomas Boesen; Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Jenny Emnéus; Claus Helix Nielsen

Recent advances in biomimetic membrane systems have resulted in an increase in membrane lifetimes from hours to days and months. Long-lived membrane systems demand the development of both new automated monitoring equipment capable of measuring electrophysiological membrane characteristics and new data processing software to analyze and organize the large amounts of data generated. In this work, we developed an automated instrumental voltage clamp solution based on a custom-designed software controller application (the WaveManager), which enables automated on-line voltage clamp data acquisition applicable to long-time series experiments. We designed another software program for off-line data processing. The automation of the on-line voltage clamp data acquisition and off-line processing was furthermore integrated with a searchable database (DiscoverySheet) for efficient data management. The combined solution provides a cost efficient and fast way to acquire, process and administrate large amounts of voltage clamp data that may be too laborious and time consuming to handle manually.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

An epifluorescence microscopy method for generalized polarization imaging

Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Claus Hélix-Nielsen

Generalized polarization (GP) microscopy represents an excellent tool to study lipid-lipid and lipid-protein interactions in situ and in vitro. Here, we present an efficient and cost effective method to perform GP microscopy using a standard light-emitting diode (LED) epifluorescence microscope equipped with a digital color camera.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Correction: Thermal stability and structural changes in bacterial toxins responsible for food poisoning

Paulina Regenthal; Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Ingemar André; Karin Lindkvist-Petersson

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172445.].


Archive | 2011

Strategies for Integrating Membrane Proteins in Biomembranes

Jesper Søndergaard Hansen; Inés Plasencia; Kamila Pszon-Bartosz

Correct integration of membrane proteins with biomimetic membranes is crucial for designing novel sensor and separation technologies based on the functionality of membrane proteins. Membrane proteins are generally delicate molecules and care need to be taken in order to retain protein structure and function during handling and reconstitution into model membranes. This chapter will give a detailed overview of available and novel membrane protein reconstitution strategies in both vesicular and planar model membrane designs.

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Claus Helix Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Jenny Emnéus

Technical University of Denmark

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Jörg Vogel

Technical University of Denmark

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Oliver Geschke

Technical University of Denmark

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Claus Hélix-Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Sania Ibragimova

Technical University of Denmark

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Per Greisen

University of Washington

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