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Dive into the research topics where Leonard F. Pease is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonard F. Pease.


ACS Nano | 2011

Fabrication of highly uniform nanoparticles from recombinant silk-elastin-like protein polymers for therapeutic agent delivery.

Rajasekhar Anumolu; Joshua A. Gustafson; Jules J. Magda; Joseph Cappello; Hamidreza Ghandehari; Leonard F. Pease

Here we generate silk-elastin-like protein (SELP) polymeric nanoparticles and demonstrate precise control over their dimensions using an electrospray differential mobility analyzer (ES-DMA). Electrospray produces droplets encompassing several polymer strands. Evaporation ensues, leading polymer strands to accumulate at the droplet interface, forming a hollow nanoparticle. The resulting nanoparticle size distributions, which govern particle yield, depend on buffer concentration to the -1/3 power, polymer concentration to the 1/3 power, and ratio of silk-to-elastin blocks. Three recombinantly tuned ratios of 8:16, 4:8, and 4:16, respectively named SELP-815K, SELP-47K, and SELP-415K, are employed, with the latter ratio resulting in a thinner shell and larger diameter for the nanoparticles than the former. The DMA narrows the size distribution by electrostatically classifying the aerosolized nanoparticles. These highly uniform nanoparticles have variations of 1.2 and 1.4 nm for 24.0 and 36.0 nm particles, respectively. Transmission electron microscopy reveals the nanoparticles to be faceted, as a buckling instability releases compression energy arising from evaporation after the shell has formed by bending it. A thermodynamic equilibrium exists between compression and bending energies, where the facet length is half the particle diameter, in agreement with experiments. Rod-like particles also formed from polymer-stabilized filaments when the viscous length exceeds the jet radius at higher solution viscosities. The unusual uniformity in composition and dimension indicates the potential of these nanoparticles to deliver bioactive and imaging agents.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2009

Quantitative Characterization of Quantum Dot-Labeled Lambda Phage for Escherichia coli Detection

Peter Yim; Matthew L. Clarke; Michael McKinstry; Silvia H. De Paoli Lacerda; Leonard F. Pease; Marina A. Dobrovolskaia; Hyeonggon Kang; Timothy D. Read; Shanmuga Sozhamannan; Jeeseong Hwang

We characterize CdSe/ZnS quantum dot (QD) binding to genetically modified bacteriophage as a model for bacterial detection. Interactions among QDs, lambda (λ) phage, and Escherichia coli are examined by several cross‐validated methods. Flow and image‐based cytometry clarify fluorescent labeling of bacteria, with image‐based cytometry additionally reporting the number of decorated phage bound to cells. Transmission electron microscopy, image‐based cytometry, and electrospray differential mobility analysis allow quantization of QDs attached to each phage (4–17 QDs) and show that λ phage used in this study exhibits enhanced QD binding to the capsid by nearly a factor of four compared to bacteriophage T7. Additionally, the characterization methodology presented can be applied to the quantitative characterization of other fluorescent nanocrystal‐biological conjugates. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009;104: 1059–1067. Published 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

Electron microscopy elucidates eosinophil degranulation patterns in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis

Hedieh Saffari; Laura H. Hoffman; Kathryn Peterson; John C. Fang; Kristin M. Leiferman; Leonard F. Pease; Gerald J. Gleich

BACKGROUND In patients with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), eosinophils accumulate and release granule proteins onto esophageal epithelium. However, little is understood about the mechanism of eosinophil degranulation. OBJECTIVE To determine and quantify eosinophil degranulation patterns, we studied esophageal biopsy specimens from both the proximal and distal esophagi of 9 randomly selected patients with EoE. METHODS The specimens were fixed in glutaraldehyde, embedded, sectioned, and imaged by means of transmission electron microscopy. Eosinophils and their granules were identified by their distinctive morphology, and all eosinophils and granules were imaged. A total of 1672 images from 18 esophageal specimens were evaluated and graded. Eosinophils were categorized based on membrane integrity and by cytoplasmic vesiculation as evidence of piecemeal degranulation. Granules were categorized based on reversal of staining (eosinophil granule core lightening) and localization within and outside the cells. RESULTS The results revealed that greater than 98% of eosinophils infiltrating the esophagus in patients with EoE demonstrate morphologic abnormalities ranging from granule changes with reversal of staining to marked cytoplasmic vesiculation to loss of cellular membrane integrity with cytolytic disruption and release of intact membrane-bound granules into the tissues. Approximately 81% of eosinophils showed membrane disruption. Extracellular granules were abundant in at least 70% of the images, and approximately 50% of these granules showed reversal of staining. On the basis of the prominence of tubulovesicular development, piecemeal degranulation appears closely related to the other morphologic changes seen in patients with EoE. CONCLUSION These findings reveal that eosinophils in esophageal biopsy specimens from patients with EoE are abnormal, with greater than 80% showing cytolysis, and therefore that evaluation by means of light microscopy after hematoxylin and eosin staining might not accurately reflect eosinophil involvement.


Langmuir | 2010

Packing and Size Determination of Colloidal Nanoclusters

Leonard F. Pease; De Hao Tsai; Joshua L. Hertz; Rebecca A. Zangmeister; Michael R. Zachariah; Michael J. Tarlov

Here we demonstrate a rapid and quantitative means to characterize the size and packing structure of small clusters of nanoparticles in colloidal suspension. Clustering and aggregation play important roles in a wide variety of phenomena of both scientific and technical importance, yet characterizing the packing of nanoparticles within small clusters and predicting their aerodynamic size remains challenging because available techniques can lack adequate resolution and sensitivity for clusters smaller than 100 nm (optical techniques), perturb the packing arrangement (electron microscopies), or provide only an ensemble average (light scattering techniques). In this article, we use electrospray-differential mobility analysis (ES-DMA), a technique that exerts electrical and drag forces on the clusters, to determine the size and packing of small clusters. We provide an analytical model to determine the mobility size of various packing geometries based on the projected area of the clusters. Data for clusters aggregated from nominally 10 nm gold particles and nonenveloped viruses of various sizes show good agreement between measured and predicted cluster sizes for close-packed spheres.


Small | 2009

Length Distribution of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes in Aqueous Suspension Measured by Electrospray Differential Mobility Analysis

Leonard F. Pease; De Hao Tsai; Jeffery A. Fagan; Barry J. Bauer; Rebecca A. Zangmeister; Michael J. Tarlov; Michael R. Zachariah

The first characterization of the length distribution of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) dispersed in a liquid by electrospray differential mobility analysis (ES-DMA) is presented. Although an understanding of geometric properties of SWCNTs, including length, diameter, aspect ratio, and chirality, is essential for commercial applications, rapid characterization of nanotube length distributions remains challenging. Here the use of ES-DMA to obtain length distributions of DNA-wrapped SWCNTs dispersed in aqueous solutions is demonstrated. Lengths measured by ES-DMA compare favorably with those obtained from multiangle light scattering, dynamic light scattering, field flow fractionation with UV/vis detection, and atomic force microscopy, validating ES-DMA as a technique to measure SWCNTs of <250 nm in length. The nanotubes are previously purified and dispersed by wrapping with oligomeric DNA in aqueous solution and centrifuging to remove bundles and amorphous carbon. These dispersions are particularly attractive due to their amenability to bulk processing, ease of storage, high concentration, compatibility with biological and high-throughput manufacturing environments, and for their potential applications ranging from electronics and hydrogen-storage vessels to anticancer agents.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015

Size and shape characterization of hydrated and desiccated exosomes

Vasiliy S. Chernyshev; Rakesh Rachamadugu; Yen Hsun Tseng; David M. Belnap; Yunlu Jia; Kyle Joe Branch; Anthony E. Butterfield; Leonard F. Pease; Philip S. Bernard; Mikhail Skliar

Exosomes are stable nanovesicles secreted by cells into the circulation. Their reported sizes differ substantially, which likely reflects the difference in the isolation techniques used, the cells that secreted them, and the methods used in their characterization. We analyzed the influence of the last factor on the measured sizes and shapes of hydrated and desiccated exosomes isolated from the serum of a pancreatic cancer patient and a healthy control. We found that hydrated exosomes are close-to-spherical nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic radius that is substantially larger than the geometric size. For desiccated exosomes, we found that the desiccated shape and sizing are influenced by the manner in which drying occurred. Isotropic desiccation in aerosol preserves the near-spherical shape of the exosomes, whereas drying on a surface likely distorts their shapes and influences the sizing results obtained by techniques that require surface fixation prior to analysis.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2015

Endoscopic appearance and location dictate diagnostic yield of biopsies in eosinophilic oesophagitis

J. Salek; Frederic Clayton; Laura A. Vinson; Hedieh Saffari; Leonard F. Pease; Kathleen K. Boynton; John C. Fang; Kristen Cox; Kathryn Peterson

Acknowledging that eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a disease with variable involvement throughout the oesophagus, studies have suggested a minimum of five biopsies to diagnose EoE. Although it is accepted that furrows and exudates appear to represent areas of inflammation, no research to date has looked specifically at EoE endoscopic findings to see if eosinophilic infiltrate correlates with specific endoscopic findings.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2012

Physical analysis of virus particles using electrospray differential mobility analysis.

Leonard F. Pease

This review critically examines an emerging tool to measure viral clearance from biomanufacturing streams, monitor assembly of viruses and virus-like particles, rapidly identify viruses from biological milieu, assay virus neutralization, and prepare bionanoconjugates for bacterial detection. Electrospray differential mobility analysis (ES-DMA) is a tool of choice to simultaneously determine viral size and concentration because it provides full multimodal size distributions with subnanometer precision from individual capsid proteins to intact viral particles. The review contrasts ES-DMA to similar tools and highlights expected growth areas including at-line process sensing as a process analytical technology (PAT), bioseparating as a distinct unit operation, monitoring viral reactions, and interrogating virus-host protein interactions.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2011

Evaluation of electrospray differential mobility analysis for virus particle analysis: Potential applications for biomanufacturing

Suvajyoti Guha; Leonard F. Pease; Kurt Brorson; Michael J. Tarlov; Michael R. Zachariah

Abstract The technique of electrospray differential mobility analysis (ES-DMA) was examined as a potential potency assay for routine virus particle analysis in biomanufacturing environments (e.g., evaluation of vaccines and gene delivery products for lot release) in the context of the International Committee of Harmonisation (ICH) Q2 guidelines. ES-DMA is a rapid particle sizing method capable of characterizing certain aspects of the structure (such as capsid proteins) and obtaining complete size distributions of viruses and virus-like particles. It was shown that ES-DMA can distinguish intact virus particles from degraded particles and measure the concentration of virus particles when calibrated with nanoparticles of known concentration. The technique has a measurement uncertainty of ≈20%, is linear over nearly 3 orders of magnitude, and has a lower limit of detection of ≈109 particles/mL. This quantitative assay was demonstrated for non-enveloped viruses. It is expected that ES-DMA will be a useful method for applications involving production and quality control of vaccines and gene therapy vectors for human use.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Physical Characterization of Icosahedral Virus Ultra Structure, Stability, and Integrity Using Electrospray Differential Mobility Analysis

Leonard F. Pease; De Hao Tsai; Kurt Brorson; Suvajyoti Guha; Michael R. Zachariah; Michael J. Tarlov

We present a rapid and quantitative method to physically characterize the structure and stability of viruses. Electrospray differential mobility analysis (ES-DMA) is used to determine the size of capsomers (i.e., hexons) and complete capsids. We demonstrate how to convert the measured mobility size into the icosahedral dimensions of a virus, which for PR772 become 68.4 nm for vertex-to-vertex, 54.4 nm for facet-to-facet, and 58.2 nm for edge-to-edge lengths, in reasonable agreement with dimensions from transmission electron microscopy for other members of the family Tectiviridae (e.g., PRD1). These results indicate ES-DMAs mobility diameter most closely approximates the edge-to-edge length. Using PR772s edge length (36.0 nm) and the size of the major capsid hexon (≈8.4 nm) from ES-DMA with icosahedral geometry, PR772s T = 25 symmetry is confirmed and the number of proteins in the capsid shell is determined. We also demonstrate the use of ES-DMA to monitor the temporal disintegration of PR772, the thermal degradation of PP7, and the appearance of degradation products, essential to viral stability assays. These results lay groundwork essential for the use of ES-DMA for a variety of applications including monitoring of vaccine and gene therapy vector products, confirmation of viral inactivation, and theoretical studies of self-assembling macromolecular structures.

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Michael J. Tarlov

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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De Hao Tsai

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Rebecca A. Zangmeister

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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