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Dive into the research topics where Josep Puigmartí-Luis is active.

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Featured researches published by Josep Puigmartí-Luis.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2011

Gene delivery with bisphosphonate-stabilized calcium phosphate nanoparticles

Elisabeth V. Giger; Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Rahel Schlatter; Bastien Castagner; Petra S. Dittrich; Jean-Christophe Leroux

Nucleic acid drugs are promising new therapeutics, due to their possible applications in a wide variety of diseases and their strong targeting potential and associated lower off-target effects compared to conventional pharmaceuticals. However, their poor intracellular bioavailability and rapid degradation hinder their development as drugs. Therefore, efficient delivery is a major challenge. Various systems have been developed to overcome this problem. The entrapment of genetic material into nanoparticles constitutes a promising approach to increase the in vitro and in vivo transfection activity. Calcium phosphate-DNA co-precipitates have been used for gene delivery for more than 35 years and have the advantage of being nontoxic, easy to produce, and having the ability to complex nucleic acids leading to efficient transfection. Conventional synthetic methods yield particles that are only stable for a short period of time. Herein is proposed a versatile, surfactant-free method to stabilize calcium phosphate-DNA nanoparticles based on the use of poly(ethylene glycol)-functionalized bisphosphonate. The strength of the interaction between the bisphosphonate and the calcium phosphate enabled the formation of stable, but bioresorbable particles of around 200 nm, which exhibited physical stability over several days. Additionally, the nanoparticles revealed good and sustained ability to transfect cells while displaying low toxicity.


Lab on a Chip | 2010

High-density micro-arrays for mass spectrometry

Pawel L. Urban; Konstantins Jefimovs; Andrea Amantonico; Stephan R. Fagerer; Thomas Schmid; Stefanie Mädler; Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Nils Goedecke; Renato Zenobi

Functional high-density micro-arrays for mass spectrometry enable rapid picolitre-volume aliquoting and ultrasensitive analysis of microscale samples, for example, single cells.


Advanced Materials | 2010

A Microfluidic Approach for the Formation of Conductive Nanowires and Hollow Hybrid Structures

Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Daniel Schaffhauser; Brian R. Burg; Petra S. Dittrich

S1-S11 Further characterization of the structures 10 μm 10 μm a) b) 10 μm 10 μm 10 μm 10 μm a) b) Figure S1. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of the resulting materials formed at flow-rate ratio of 1 and at concentration of: a) 0.0024M (TTF), 0.0006M (hydrogen tetrachloroaurate) and b) 0.0072M (TTF), 0.0018M (hydrogen tetrachloroaurate). Figure S2. Graph showing the correlation between average widths of the structures with their standard deviation and the flow-rate ratio of the synthesis. The averages are calculated from approximately 100 different wires chosen randomly and from different areas for each sample.


Small | 2013

Dual-template synthesis of one-dimensional conductive nanoparticle superstructures from coordination metal-peptide polymer crystals.

Marta Rubio-Martínez; Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Inhar Imaz; Petra S. Dittrich; Daniel Maspoch

Bottom-up fabrication of self-assembled structures made of nanoparticles may lead to new materials, arrays and devices with great promise for myriad applications. Here a new class of metal-peptide scaffolds is reported: coordination polymer Ag(I)-DLL belt-like crystals, which enable the dual-template synthesis of more sophisticated nanoparticle superstructures. In these biorelated scaffolds, the self-assembly and recognition capacities of peptides and the selective reduction of Ag(I) ions to Ag are simultaneously exploited to control the growth and assembly of inorganic nanoparticles: first on their surfaces, and then inside the structures themselves. The templated internal Ag nanoparticles are well confined and closely packed, conditions that favour electrical conductivity in the superstructures. It is anticipated that these Ag(I)-DLL belts could be applied to create long (>100 μm) conductive Ag@Ag nanoparticle superstructures and polymetallic, multifunctional Fe3 O4 @Ag nanoparticle composites that marry the magnetic and conductive properties of the two nanoparticle types.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Freezing the Nonclassical Crystal Growth of a Coordination Polymer Using Controlled Dynamic Gradients.

Marta Rubio-Martínez; Inhar Imaz; Neus Domingo; Afshin Abrishamkar; Tiago Sotto Mayor; René M. Rossi; Carlos Carbonell; Andrew J. deMello; David B. Amabilino; Daniel Maspoch; Josep Puigmartí-Luis

A methodology that can be efficiently used to synthesize, isolate, and study out-of-equilibrium crystal structures employing controlled and diffusion-limited microfluidic environments is demonstrated. Unlike studies conducted with conventional mixing procedures in a flask, it is proven experimentally and with numerical simulations that microfluidic technologies can undoubtedly fine-tune reaction times and reagents concentration profiles; factors that enable out-of-equilibrium crystal forms to be obtained.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2016

Microfluidic Pneumatic Cages: A Novel Approach for In-chip Crystal Trapping, Manipulation and Controlled Chemical Treatment

Afshin Abrishamkar; Markos Paradinas; Elena Bailo; Romen Rodriguez-Trujillo; Raphael Pfattner; René M. Rossi; Carmen Ocal; Andrew J. deMello; David B. Amabilino; Josep Puigmartí-Luis

The precise localization and controlled chemical treatment of structures on a surface are significant challenges for common laboratory technologies. Herein, we introduce a microfluidic-based technology, employing a double-layer microfluidic device, which can trap and localize in situ and ex situ synthesized structures on microfluidic channel surfaces. Crucially, we show how such a device can be used to conduct controlled chemical reactions onto on-chip trapped structures and we demonstrate how the synthetic pathway of a crystalline molecular material and its positioning inside a microfluidic channel can be precisely modified with this technology. This approach provides new opportunities for the controlled assembly of structures on surface and for their subsequent treatment.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017

Microfluidic-based Synthesis of Covalent Organic Frameworks (COFs): A Tool for Continuous Production of COF Fibers and Direct Printing on a Surface

Afshin Abrishamkar; David Rodríguez-San-Miguel; Jorge A. R. Navarro; Romen Rodriguez-Trujillo; David B. Amabilino; Rubén Mas-Ballesté; Félix Zamora; Andrew J. deMello; Josep Puigmartí-Luis

Covalent Organic Frameworks (COFs) are a class of porous covalent materials which are frequently synthesized as unprocessable crystalline powders. The first COF was reported in 2005 with much effort centered on the establishment of new synthetic routes for its preparation. To date, most available synthetic methods for COF synthesis are based on bulk mixing under solvothermal conditions. Therefore, there is increasing interest in developing systematic protocols for COF synthesis that provide for fine control over reaction conditions and improve COF processability on surfaces, which is essential for their use in practical applications. Herein, we present a novel microfluidic-based method for COF synthesis where the reaction between two constituent building blocks, 1,3,5-benzenetricarbaldehyde (BTCA) and 1,3,5-tris(4-aminophenyl)benzene (TAPB), takes place under controlled diffusion conditions and at room temperature. Using such an approach yields sponge-like, crystalline fibers of a COF material, hereafter called MF-COF. The mechanical properties of MF-COF and the dynamic nature of the approach allow the continuous production of MF-COF fibers and their direct printing onto surfaces. The general method opens new potential applications requiring advanced printing of 2D or 3D COF structures on flexible or rigid surfaces.


Chemical Communications | 2016

Crystalline fibres of a covalent organic framework through bottom-up microfluidic synthesis

David Rodríguez-San-Miguel; Afshin Abrishamkar; Jorge A. R. Navarro; Romen Rodriguez-Trujillo; David B. Amabilino; Rubén Mas-Ballesté; Félix Zamora; Josep Puigmartí-Luis


Lab on a Chip | 2011

Controlling the length and location of in situ formed nanowires by means of microfluidic tools

Phillip Kuhn; Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Inhar Imaz; Daniel Maspoch; Petra S. Dittrich


Polymer | 2015

Tunable release of hydrophilic compounds from hydrophobic nanostructured fibers prepared by emulsion electrospinning

Gökçe Yazgan; Ana-Maria Popa; René M. Rossi; T. K. Maniura-Weber; Josep Puigmartí-Luis; Daniel Crespy; Giuseppino Fortunato

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Afshin Abrishamkar

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Daniel Maspoch

Spanish National Research Council

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Inhar Imaz

Spanish National Research Council

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