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Dive into the research topics where Mahdieh Yazdani is active.

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Featured researches published by Mahdieh Yazdani.


ACS Nano | 2014

Fabrication of Corona-Free Nanoparticles with Tunable Hydrophobicity

Daniel F. Moyano; Krishnendu Saha; Gyan Prakash; Bo Yan; Hao Kong; Mahdieh Yazdani; Vincent M. Rotello

A protein corona is formed at the surface of nanoparticles in the presence of biological fluids, masking the surface properties of the particle and complicating the relationship between chemical functionality and biological effects. We present here a series of zwitterionic NPs of variable hydrophobicity that do not adsorb proteins at moderate levels of serum protein and do not form hard coronas at physiological serum concentrations. These particles provide platforms to evaluate nanobiological behavior such as cell uptake and hemolysis dictated directly by chemical motifs at the nanoparticle surface.


ACS Nano | 2016

Regulation of Macrophage Recognition through the Interplay of Nanoparticle Surface Functionality and Protein Corona

Krishnendu Saha; Mehran Rahimi; Mahdieh Yazdani; Sung Tae Kim; Daniel F. Moyano; Singyuk Hou; Ridhha Das; Rubul Mout; Farhad Rezaee; Morteza Mahmoudi; Vincent M. Rotello

Using a family of cationic gold nanoparticles (NPs) with similar size and charge, we demonstrate that proper surface engineering can control the nature and identity of protein corona in physiological serum conditions. The protein coronas were highly dependent on the hydrophobicity and arrangement of chemical motifs on NP surface. The NPs were uptaken in macrophages in a corona-dependent manner, predominantly through recognition of specific complement proteins in the NP corona. Taken together, this study shows that surface functionality can be used to tune the protein corona formed on NP surface, dictating the interaction of NPs with macrophages.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Ratiometric Array of Conjugated Polymers-Fluorescent Protein Provides a Robust Mammalian Cell Sensor.

Subinoy Rana; S. Gokhan Elci; Rubul Mout; Arvind K. Singla; Mahdieh Yazdani; Markus Bender; Avinash Bajaj; Krishnendu Saha; Uwe H. F. Bunz; Frank R. Jirik; Vincent M. Rotello

Supramolecular complexes of a family of positively charged conjugated polymers (CPs) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) create a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based ratiometric biosensor array. Selective multivalent interactions of the CPs with mammalian cell surfaces caused differential change in FRET signals, providing a fingerprint signature for each cell type. The resulting fluorescence signatures allowed the identification of 16 different cell types and discrimination between healthy, cancerous, and metastatic cells, with the same genetic background. While the CP-GFP sensor array completely differentiated between the cell types, only partial classification was achieved for the CPs alone, validating the effectiveness of the ratiometric sensor. The utility of the biosensor was further demonstrated in the detection of blinded unknown samples, where 121 of 128 samples were correctly identified. Notably, this selectivity-based sensor stratified diverse cell types in minutes, using only 2000 cells, without requiring specific biomarkers or cell labeling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Cancer Cell Discrimination Using Host–Guest “Doubled” Arrays

Ngoc D. B. Le; Gulen Yesilbag Tonga; Rubul Mout; Sung Tae Kim; Marcos E. Wille; Subinoy Rana; Karen A. Dunphy; D. Joseph Jerry; Mahdieh Yazdani; Rajesh Ramanathan; Caren M. Rotello; Vincent M. Rotello

We report a nanosensor that uses cell lysates to rapidly profile the tumorigenicity of cancer cells. This sensing platform uses host-guest interactions between cucurbit[7]uril and the cationic headgroup of a gold nanoparticle to non-covalently modify the binding of three fluorescent proteins of a multi-channel sensor in situ. This approach doubles the number of output channels to six, providing single-well identification of cell lysates with 100% accuracy. Significantly, this classification could be extended beyond the training set, determining the invasiveness of novel cell lines. The unique fingerprint of these cell lysates required minimal sample quantity (200 ng, ∼1000 cells), making the methodology compatible with microbiopsy technology.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

Array-based sensing using nanoparticles: an alternative approach for cancer diagnostics

Ngoc Db Le; Mahdieh Yazdani; Vincent M. Rotello

Array-based sensing using nanoparticles (NPs) provides an attractive alternative to specific biomarker-focused strategies for cancer diagnosis. The physical and chemical properties of NPs provide both the recognition and transduction capabilities required for biosensing. Array-based sensors utilize a combined response from the interactions between sensors and analytes to generate a distinct pattern (fingerprint) for each analyte. These interactions can be the result of either the combination of multiple specific biomarker recognition (specific binding) or multiple selective binding responses, known as chemical nose sensing. The versatility of the latter array-based sensing using NPs can facilitate the development of new personalized diagnostic methodologies in cancer diagnostics, a necessary evolution in the current healthcare system to better provide personalized treatments. This review will describe the basic principle of array-based sensors, along with providing examples of both invasive and noninvasive samples used in cancer diagnosis.


ACS Sensors | 2016

Selectivity and Specificity: Pros and Cons in Sensing

William J. Peveler; Mahdieh Yazdani; Vincent M. Rotello

Sensing using specific and selective receptors provides two very different but complementary strategies. This Sensor Issues article will discuss the merits and challenges of specific sensors, and selective sensors based on synthetic arrays. We will examine where each has been successfully applied to a sensing challenge, and then look at how a combined approach could take elements of both to provide new sensor platforms.


ACS Nano | 2017

Sensing by Smell: Nanoparticle–Enzyme Sensors for Rapid and Sensitive Detection of Bacteria with Olfactory Output

Bradley Duncan; Ngoc D. B. Le; Colleen M. Alexander; Akash Gupta; Gulen Yesilbag Tonga; Mahdieh Yazdani; Ryan F. Landis; Li-Sheng Wang; Bo Yan; Serdar Burmaoglu; Xiaoning Li; Vincent M. Rotello

We present here a highly efficient sensor for bacteria that provides an olfactory output, allowing detection without the use of instrumentation and with a modality that does not require visual identification. The sensor platform uses nanoparticles to reversibly complex and inhibits lipase. These complexes are disrupted in the presence of bacteria, restoring enzyme activity and generating scent from odorless pro-fragrance substrate molecules. This system provides rapid (15 min) sensing and very high sensitivity (102 cfu/mL) detection of bacteria using the human sense of smell as an output.


Polymer Chemistry | 2017

Fingerprinting antibiotics with PAE-based fluorescent sensor arrays

Jinsong Han; Benhua Wang; Markus Bender; Jessica Pfisterer; Wei Huang; Kai Seehafer; Mahdieh Yazdani; Vincent M. Rotello; Caren M. Rotello; Uwe H. F. Bunz

We outline an evolution process for tongue elements composed of poly(p-aryleneethynylene)s (PAE) and detergents, resulting in a chemical tongue (24 elements) that discerns antibiotics. Cross-breeding of this new tongue with tongue elements that consist of simple poly(p-phenyleneethynylene)s (PPE) at different pH-values leads to an enlarged sensor array, composed of 30 elements. This tongue was pruned, employing principal component analysis. We find that a filial tongue featuring three elements from each original array (i.e. a six element tongue) is superior to either of the prior tongues and the composite tongue in the discrimination of structurally different antibiotics. Such a selection process should be general and give an idea how to successfully generate powerful low-selectivity sensor elements and configure them into discriminative chemical tongues.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Biodegradable Nanocomposite Antimicrobials for the Eradication of Multidrug-Resistant Bacterial Biofilms without Accumulated Resistance

Ryan F. Landis; Cheng-Hsuan Li; Akash Gupta; Yi-Wei Lee; Mahdieh Yazdani; Nipaporn Ngernyuang; Ismail Altinbasak; Sanaa Mansoor; Muhammadaha A. S. Khichi; Amitav Sanyal; Vincent M. Rotello

Infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria are a rapidly growing threat to human health, in many cases exacerbated by their presence in biofilms. We report here a biocompatible oil-in-water cross-linked polymeric nanocomposite that degrades in the presence of physiologically relevant biomolecules. These degradable nanocomposites demonstrated broad-spectrum penetration and elimination of MDR bacteria, eliminating biofilms with no toxicity to cocultured mammalian fibroblast cells. Notably, serial passaging revealed that bacteria were unable to develop resistance toward these nanocomposites, highlighting the therapeutic promise of this platform.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Triptycene as a Supramolecular Additive in PTB7:PCBM Blends and Its Influence on Photovoltaic Properties

Lethy Krishnan Jagadamma; Liam J. McCarron; Alan A. Wiles; Victoria Savikhin; Muhammad T. Sajjad; Mahdieh Yazdani; Vincent M. Rotello; Michael F. Toney; Graeme Cooke; Ifor D. W. Samuel

Additives play an important role in modifying the morphology and phase separation of donor and acceptor molecules in bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells. Here, we report triptycene (TPC) as a small-molecule additive for supramolecular control of phase separation and concomitant improvement of the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of PTB7 donor and fullerene acceptor-based BHJ polymer solar cells. An overall 60% improvement in PCE is observed for both PTB7:PC61BM and PTB7:PC71BM blends. The improved photovoltaic (PV) performance can be attributed to three factors: (a) TPC-induced supramolecular interactions with donor:acceptor components in the blends to realize a nanoscale phase-separated morphology; (b) an increase in the charge transfer state energy that lowers the driving force for electron transfer from donor to acceptor molecules; and (c) an increase in the charge carrier mobility. An improvement in efficiency using TPC as a supramolecular additive has also been demonstrated for other BHJ blends such as PBDB-T:PC71BM and P3HT:PCBM, implying the wide applicability of this new additive molecule. A comparison of the photostability of TPC as an additive for PTB7:PCBM solar cells to that of the widely used 1,8-diiodooctane additive shows ∼30% higher retention of PV performance for the TPC-added solar cells after 34 h of AM 1.5G illumination. The results obtained suggest that the approach of using additives that can promote supramolecular interactions to modify the length scale of phase separation between donor and acceptor is very promising and can lead to the development of highly efficient and stable organic photovoltaics.

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Vincent M. Rotello

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Ryan F. Landis

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Akash Gupta

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Krishnendu Saha

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Rubul Mout

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Yi-Wei Lee

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Bo Yan

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Bradley Duncan

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Caren M. Rotello

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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