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Dive into the research topics where Kristoffer Tømmeraas is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristoffer Tømmeraas.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Kinetics of hyaluronan hydrolysis in acidic solution at various pH values.

Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Claes Melander

Hyaluronic acid (HA) was hydrolyzed using varying temperatures (40, 60, and 80 degrees C) and acid concentrations (0.0010, 0.010, 0.10, 0.50, 1.0, and 2.0 M HCl). The degradation process was monitored by determination of weight average molecular weight ( M w) by size-exclusion chromatography with online multiangle laser light scattering, refractive index, and intrinsic viscosity detectors (SEC-MALLS-RI-visc) on samples taken out continuously during the hydrolysis. SEC-MALLS-RI-visc showed that the degradation gave narrow molecular weight distributions with polydispersity indexes ( M w/ M n) of 1.3-1.7. Kinetic plots of 1/ M w versus time gave linear plots showing that acid hydrolysis of HA is a random process and that it follows a first order kinetics. For hydrolysis in HCl at 60 and 80 degrees C, it was shown that the kinetic rate constant ( k h) for the degradation depended linearly on the acid concentration. Further, the dependence of temperature on the hydrolysis in 0.1 M HCl was found to give a linear Arrhenius plot (ln k h vs 1/ T), with an activation energy ( E a) of 137 kJ/mol and Arrhenius constant ( A) of 7.86 x 10 (15) h (-1). (1)H NMR spectroscopy was used to characterize the product of extensive hydrolysis (48 h at 60 degrees C in 0.1 M HCl). No indication of de- N-acetylation of the N-acetyl glucosamine (GlcNAc) units or other byproducts were seen. Additionally, a low molecular weight HA was hydrolyzed in 0.1 M DCl for 4 h at 80 degrees C. It was shown that it was primarily the beta-(1-->4)-linkage between GlcNAc and glucuronic acid (GlcA) that was cleaved during hydrolysis at pH < p K a,GlcA. The dependence of the hydrolysis rate constant was further studied as a function of pH between -0.3 and 5. The degradation was found to be random (linear kinetic plots) over the entire pH range studied. Further, the kinetic rate constant was found to depend linearly on pH in the region -0.3 to 3. Above this pH (around the p K a of HA), the kinetic constant decreased more slowly, probably due to either a change in polymer conformation or due to an increased affinity for protons due to the polymer becoming charged as the GlcA units dissociated.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2014

Thermal degradation and stability of sodium hyaluronate in solid state

Mikael Bjerg Caspersen; Johannes P. Roubroeks; Liu Qun; Huang Shan; Jytte Fogh; Zhao RuiDong; Kristoffer Tømmeraas

The kinetics and mechanism of depolymerisation of solid sodium hyaluronate at elevated temperatures and various pH have been investigated. Depolymerisation was found to be governed by random chain scission. The activation energy at neutral pH was found to be 127 kJ/mol. The solid polymer was most stable at neutral pH. Results suggest the depolymerisation mechanism in solid- and solution state to be the same. Correlation of log intrinsic viscosity to log weight-average molecular weight was investigated to ensure high quality data for polymer size. Based on more than sixty hyaluronate samples spanning from 0.4 to 2.3 MDa, it was concluded that a second order polynomial regression gives a better fit than the linear regression offered by classical Mark-Houwink-Kuhn-Sakurada description. This finding was supported by literature data and could be expanded to other simple, well behaving linear polymers, such as polystyrene and polyethylene.


Journal of Fluorescence | 2010

Biophysical Properties of Phenyl Succinic Acid Derivatised Hyaluronic Acid

Maria Teresa Neves-Petersen; Søren Klitgaard; Esben Skovsen; Steffen B. Petersen; Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Khadija Schwach-Abdellaoui

Modification of hyaluronic acid (HA) with aryl succinic anhydrides results in new biomedical properties of HA as compared to non-modified HA, such as more efficient skin penetration, stronger binding to the skin, and the ability to blend with hydrophobic materials. In the present study, hyaluronic acid has been derivatised with the anhydride form of phenyl succinic acid (PheSA). The fluorescence of PheSA was efficiently quenched by the HA matrix. HA also acted as a singlet oxygen scavenger. Fluorescence lifetime(s) of PheSA in solution and when attached to the HA matrix has been monitored with ps resolved streak camera technology. Structural and fluorescence properties changes induced on HA-PheSA due to the presence of singlet oxygen were monitored using static light scattering (SLS), steady state fluorescence and ps time resolved fluorescence studies. SLS studies provided insight into the depolymerisation kinetics of PheSA derivatised HA matrix in the presence of singlet oxygen. Time resolved fluorescence studies grave insight into the dynamics of the reaction mechanisms induced on HA-PheSA by singlet oxygen. These studies provided insight into the medical relevance of PheSA derivatised HA: its capacity of scavenging singlet oxygen and of quenching PheSA fluorescence. These studies revealed that HA-PheSA is a strong quencher of electronic excited state PheSA and acts as a scavenger of singlet oxygen, thus medical applications of this derivatised form of HA may protect tissues and organs, such as skin, against reactive oxygen species damage.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2005

Isolation and characterization of physicochemical and material properties of arabinoxylans from barley husks

Anders Höije; Maria Gröndahl; Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Paul Gatenholm


Biomacromolecules | 2008

New amphiphilic lactic acid oligomer-hyaluronan conjugates: synthesis and physicochemical characterization.

Laurent Pravata; Christian Braud; Mahfoud Boustta; Abdelsalam El Ghzaoui; Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Fanny Guillaumie; Khadija Schwach-Abdellaoui; Michel Vert


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2012

Novel self-associative and multiphasic nanostructured soft carriers based on amphiphilic hyaluronic acid derivatives

Corinne Eenschooten; Andrea Vaccaro; Florence Delie; Fanny Guillaumie; Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Georgios M. Kontogeorgis; Khadija Schwach-Abdellaoui; Michal Borkovec; Robert Gurny


Archive | 2006

Aryl/Alkyl Succinic Anhydride Hyaluronan Derivatives

Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Corinne Eenschooten


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2011

New amphiphilic hyaluronan derivatives based on modification with alkenyl and aryl succinic anhydrides

Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Martin Mellergaard; Birgitte M. Malle; Peter Skagerlind


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2010

Heterogeneous hydrolysis of hyaluronic acid in ethanolic HCl slurry

Claes Melander; Kristoffer Tømmeraas


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2009

Poly-acid properties of biosynthetic hyaluronan studied by titration

Kristoffer Tømmeraas; Per-Olof Wahlund

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Fanny Guillaumie

Technical University of Denmark

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Georgios M. Kontogeorgis

Technical University of Denmark

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