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Dive into the research topics where Johannes Frueh is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes Frueh.


Advanced Science | 2016

Guidable Thermophoretic Janus Micromotors Containing Gold Nanocolorifiers for Infrared Laser Assisted Tissue Welding

Wenping He; Johannes Frueh; Narisu Hu; Liping Liu; Meiyu Gai; Qiang He

Current wound sealing systems such as nanoparticle‐based gluing of tissues allow almost immediate wound sealing. The assistance of a laser beam allows the wound sealing with higher controllability due to the collagen fiber melting which is defined by loss of tertiary protein structure and restoration upon cooling. Usually one employs dyes to paint onto the wound, if water absorption bands are absent. In case of strong bleeding or internal wounds such applications are not feasible due to low welding depth in case of water absorption bands, dyes washing off, or the dyes becoming diluted within the wound. One possible solution of these drawbacks is to use autonomously movable particles composing of biocompatible gold and magnetite nanoparticles and biocompatible polyelectrolyte complexes. In this paper a proof of principle study is presented on the utilization of thermophoretic Janus particles and capsules employed as dyes for infrared laser‐assisted tissue welding. This approach proves to be efficient in sealing the wound on the mouse in vivo. The temperature measurement of single particle level proves successful photothermal heating, while the mechanical characterizations of welded liver, skin, and meat confirm mechanical restoration of the welded biological samples.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2015

Remote‐Controllable Explosive Polymer Multilayer Tubes for Rapid Cancer Cell Killing

Zhiguang Wu; Changyong Gao; Johannes Frueh; Jianming Sun; Qiang He

Gold nanoshell-functionalized polymer multilayer tubes can be used as potent therapeutic agents for remote killing of cancer cells in a controlled manner due to the emerging pressure wave and tube fragments piercing the cell wall. The explosion is based on rapid evaporation of water inside the tubes caused by photothermal effects. The mechanism of explosion is presented in theory and experiment. The explosion of the tubes depends on the absorption coefficient and size of the gold nanoshells in the tubes, whereby the placement of the gold particles inside or outside of the tubes has no obvious effect on the explosive properties.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

How Leucocyte Cell Membrane Modified Janus Microcapsules are Phagocytosed by Cancer Cells

Wenping He; Johannes Frueh; Zhenwei Wu; Qiang He

Modern drug delivery systems rely on either antibody-based single-surface recognition or on surface-hydrophobicity-based approaches. For a tumor showing various surface mutations, both approaches fail. This publication hereby presents Janus capsules based on polyelectrolyte multilayer microcapsules exhibiting human leucocyte (THP-1 cell line) cell membranes for discriminating HUVEC cells from three different cancer cell lines. Despite destroying the cellular integrity of leucocyte cells, the modified Janus capsules are able to adhere to cancer cells. Leucocyte cell-membrane-coated Janus capsules are phagocytosed with the cellular membrane part pointing to the cells.


Langmuir | 2016

Leucocyte Membrane-Coated Janus Microcapsules for Enhanced Photothermal Cancer Treatment

Wenping He; Johannes Frueh; Zhenwei Wu; Qiang He

Polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) capsules are promising candidates for many kinds of cancer detection and treatment but are usually intended to deliver cargo to specific sites or to destroy cancer cells based on photothermal effects from the outside. In this publication we prove that it is possible to kill cancer cells from the inside based on phagocytosed PEM capsules. In addition we show how to open the cells and bring the PEM capsules to the surface of cancer cells based on photothermal effects and rapid evaporation of water. Diffusion-based temperature determinations of the photothermal effect up to the evaporation temperature of water are presented.


RSC Advances | 2015

Micro-contact printing of PEM thin films: effect of line tension and surface energies

Meiyu Gai; Johannes Frueh; Agnès P. Girard-Egrot; Samuel Rebaud; Bastien Doumèche; Qiang He

Polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) thin films are popular candidates for surface coating due to their versatility, tunability and simple production method. Often these films are used in a 2D structured manner for creating defined cell scaffolds or electronic applications. Although these films were successfully printed in the past, the conditions and energies necessary for a successful printing were only investigated as isolated parameters or as a function of the substrate but not the PEM surface energy and therefore the dominating forces remained controversial. We hereby present a theory and method for microcontact printing of condensed polyelectrolyte multilayer thin films, based on surface energies and the line tension. The theory relies on the surface energy of the substrate, stamp and PEM as well as the PEM line tension ratios to create the desired pattern. The presented theory is able to predict the printability, quality and resolution limit of a chosen system and was evaluated with experiments. A reduction of the production time from the beginning of PEM assembly to the final pattern from several hours down to 30 minutes was achieved while increasing reproducibility and resolution of the printed patterns at the same time. We would like to point out that this approach can generally be used for any kind of adsorbed thin film on substrates.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Patterned Microstructure Fabrication: Polyelectrolyte Complexes vs Polyelectrolyte Multilayers

Meiyu Gai; Johannes Frueh; Valeriya L. Kudryavtseva; Rui Mao; Maxim V. Kiryukhin; Gleb B. Sukhorukov

Polyelectrolyte complexes (PEC) are formed by mixing the solutions of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes, which were hitherto deemed “impossible” to process, since they are infusible and brittle when dry. Here, we describe the process of fabricating free-standing micro-patterned PEC films containing array of hollow or filled microchambers by one-step casting with small applied pressure and a PDMS mould. These structures are compared with polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEM) thin films having array of hollow microchambers produced from a layer-by-layer self-assembly of the same polyelectrolytes on the same PDMS moulds. PEM microchambers “cap” and “wall” thickness depend on the number of PEM bilayers, while the “cap” and “wall” of the PEC microchambers can be tuned by varying the applied pressure and the type of patterned mould. The proposed PEC production process omits layering approaches currently employed for PEMs, reducing the production time from ~2 days down to 2 hours. The error-free structured PEC area was found to be significantly larger compared to the currently-employed microcontact printing for PEMs. The sensitivity of PEC chambers towards aqueous environments was found to be higher compared to those composed of PEM.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Polybenzoxazole Nanofiber-Reinforced Moisture-Responsive Soft Actuators

Meiling Chen; Johannes Frueh; Daolin Wang; Xiankun Lin; Hui Xie; Qiang He

Hydromorphic biological systems, such as morning glory flowers, pinecones, and awns, have inspired researchers to design moisture-sensitive soft actuators capable of directly converting the change of moisture into motion or mechanical work. Here, we report a moisture-sensitive poly(p-phenylene benzobisoxazole) nanofiber (PBONF)-reinforced carbon nanotube/poly(vinyl alcohol) (CNT/PVA) bilayer soft actuator with fine performance on conductivity and mechanical properties. The embedded PBONFs not only assist CNTs to form a continuous, conductive film, but also enhance the mechanical performance of the actuators. The PBONF-reinforced CNT/PVA bilayer actuators can unsymmetrically adsorb and desorb water, resulting in a reversible deformation. More importantly, the actuators show a pronounced increase of conductivity due to the deformation induced by the moisture change, which allows the integration of a moisture-sensitive actuator and a humidity sensor. Upon changing the environmental humidity, the actuators can respond by the deformation for shielding and report the humidity change in a visual manner, which has been demonstrated by a tweezer and a curtain. Such nanofiber-reinforced bilayer actuators with the sensing capability should hold considerable promise for the applications such as soft robots, sensors, intelligent switches, integrated devices, and material storage.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015

Laser-induced fast fusion of gold nanoparticle-modified polyelectrolyte microcapsules.

Yingjie Wu; Johannes Frueh; Tieyan Si; Helmuth Möhwald; Qiang He

In this study we investigated the effect of laser-induced membrane fusion of polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) based microcapsules bearing surface-attached gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in aqueous media. We demonstrate that a dense coating of the capsules with AuNPs leads to enhanced light absorption, causing an increase of local temperature. This enhances the migration of polyelectrolytes within the PEMs and thus enables a complete fusion of two or more capsules. The encapsulated substances can achieve complete merging upon short-term laser irradiation (30 s, 30 mW @ 650 nm). The whole fusion process is followed by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. In control experiments, microcapsules without AuNPs do not show a significant capsule fusion upon irradiation. It was also found that the duration of capsule fusion is affected by the density of AuNPs on the shell - the higher the density of AuNPs the shorter the fusion time. All these findings confirm that laser-induced microcapsule fusion is a new type of membrane fusion. This effect helps to study the interior exchange reactions of functional microcapsules, micro-reactors and drug transport across multilayers.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Polylactic Acid Sealed Polyelectrolyte Multilayer Microchambers for Entrapment of Salts and Small Hydrophilic Molecules Precipitates.

Meiyu Gai; Johannes Frueh; Valeriya L. Kudryavtseva; Alexey M. Yashchenok; Gleb B. Sukhorukov

Efficient depot systems for entrapment and storage of small water-soluble molecules are of high demand for wide variety of applications ranging from implant based drug delivery in medicine and catalysis in chemical processes to anticorrosive systems in industry where surface-mediated active component delivery is required on a time and site specific manner. This work reports the fabrication of individually sealed hollow-structured polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) microchamber arrays based on layer-by-layer self-assembly as scaffolds and microcontact printing. These PEM chambers are composed out of biocompatible polyelectrolytes and sealed by a monolayer of hydrophobic biocompatible and biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA). Coating the chambers with hydrophobic PLA allows for entrapment of a microair-bubble in each chamber that seals and hence drastically reduces the PEM permeability. PLA@PEM microchambers are proven to enable prolonged subaqueous storage of small hydrophilic salts and molecules such as crystalline NaCl, doxicycline, and fluorescent dye rhodamine B. The presented microchambers are able to entrap air bubbles and demonstrate a novel strategy for entrapment, storage, and protection of micropackaged water-soluble substances in precipitated form. These chambers allow triggered release as demonstrated by ultrasound responsiveness of the chambers. Low-frequency ultrasound exposure is utilized for microchamber opening and payload release.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2017

Forecastable and Guidable Bubble-Propelled Microplate Motors for Cell Transport

Narisu Hu; Bin Zhang; Meiyu Gai; Ce Zheng; Johannes Frueh; Qiang He

Cell transport is important to renew body functions and organs with stem cells, or to attack cancer cells with immune cells. The main hindrances of this method are the lack of understanding of cell motion as well as proper transport systems. In this publication, bubble-propelled polyelectrolyte microplates are used for controlled transport and guidance of HeLa cells. Cells survive attachment on the microplates and up to 22 min in 5% hydrogen peroxide solution. They can be guided by a magnetic field whereby increased friction of cells attached to microplates decreases the speed by 90% compared to pristine microplates. The motion direction of the cell-motor system is easier to predict due to the cell being opposite to the bubbles.

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Qiang He

Harbin Institute of Technology

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Meiyu Gai

Queen Mary University of London

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Gleb B. Sukhorukov

Queen Mary University of London

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Narisu Hu

Harbin Institute of Technology

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Tieyan Si

Harbin Institute of Technology

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Wenping He

Harbin Institute of Technology

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Bin Zhang

Harbin Medical University

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Ce Zheng

Harbin Medical University

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Jingxin Shao

Harbin Institute of Technology

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