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Dive into the research topics where Mariarosa Mazza is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariarosa Mazza.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2012

Amphiphilic poly(l-amino acids) - New materials for drug delivery

Aikaterini Lalatsa; Andreas G. Schätzlein; Mariarosa Mazza; Thi Bich Hang Le; Ijeoma F. Uchegbu

The formulation of drug compounds into medicines will increasingly rely on the use of specially tailored molecules, which fundamentally alter the drugs pharmacokinetics to enable its therapeutic activity. This is particularly true of the more challenging hydrophobic drugs or therapeutic biological molecules. The demand for such enabled medicines will translate into a demand for advanced highly functionalised drug delivery materials. Polymers have been used to formulate medicines for many decades and this is unlikely to change soon. Amphiphilic polymers based on amino acids are the subject of this review. These molecules, which present as either poly(L-amino acid) block copolymers or poly(L-amino acid) backbones with hydrophobic substituents, self assemble into micelles, vesicles, nanofibres and solid nanoparticles and such self assemblies, have drug delivery capabilities. The nature of the self-assembly depends on the chemistry of the constituent molecules, with the more hydrophilic molecules forming nanosized micellar aggregates including peptide nanofibres, molecules of intermediate hydrophobicity forming polymeric vesicles and the more hydrophobic variants forming amorphous polymeric nanoparticles of 100-1000 nm in diameter. The self-assemblies may be loaded with drugs or may present as micelle forming polymer-drug conjugates and the supramolecular aggregates have been employed as drug solubilisers, tumour targeting agents, gene delivery vectors and facilitators of intracellular drug uptake, with a more promising polymer-drug conjugate progressing to clinical testing.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Controlled In Vivo Swimming of a Swarm of Bacteria‐Like Microrobotic Flagella

Ania Servant; Famin Qiu; Mariarosa Mazza; Kostas Kostarelos; Bradley J. Nelson

In vivo imaging and actuation of a swarm of magnetic helical microswimmers by external magnetic fields (less than 10 mT) in deep tissue is demonstrated for the first time. This constitutes a major milestone in the field, yielding a generation of micrometer-scale transporters with numerous applications in biomedicine including synthetic biology, assisted fertilization, and drug/gene delivery.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Liposome–Gold Nanorod Hybrids for High-Resolution Visualization Deep in Tissues

Neus Lozano; Wafa’ T. Al-Jamal; Adrian Taruttis; Nicolas Beziere; Neal C. Burton; Jeroen Van den Bossche; Mariarosa Mazza; Eva Herzog; Vasilis Ntziachristos; Kostas Kostarelos

The design of liposome-nanoparticle hybrids offers a rich toolbox for the fabrication of multifunctional modalities. A self-assembled liposome-gold nanorod hybrid vesicular system that consists of lipid-bilayer-associated gold nanorods designed to allow deep tissue detection, therapy, and monitoring in living animals using multispectral optoacoustic tomography has been fabricated and characterized in vitro and in vivo.


ACS Nano | 2013

Nanofiber-Based Delivery of Therapeutic Peptides to the Brain

Mariarosa Mazza; Rebecca Notman; Jamshed Anwar; Alison Rodger; Matthew R. Hicks; Gary N. Parkinson; Dave McCarthy; Tina Daviter; Julian Moger; Natalie L. Garrett; Tania L. Mead; Michael A. Briggs; Andreas G. Schätzlein; Ijeoma F. Uchegbu

The delivery of therapeutic peptides and proteins to the central nervous system is the biggest challenge when developing effective neuropharmaceuticals. The central issue is that the blood-brain barrier is impermeable to most molecules. Here we demonstrate the concept of employing an amphiphilic derivative of a peptide to deliver the peptide into the brain. The key to success is that the amphiphilic peptide should by design self-assemble into nanofibers wherein the active peptide epitope is tightly wrapped around the nanofiber core. The nanofiber form appears to protect the amphiphilic peptide from degradation while in the plasma, and the amphiphilic nature of the peptide promotes its transport across the blood-brain barrier. Therapeutic brain levels of the amphiphilic peptide are achieved with this strategy, compared with the absence of detectable peptide in the brain and the consequent lack of a therapeutic response when the underivatized peptide is administered.


ACS Nano | 2015

Peptide Nanofiber Complexes with siRNA for Deep Brain Gene Silencing by Stereotactic Neurosurgery

Mariarosa Mazza; Marilena Hadjidemetriou; Irene de Lázaro; Cyrill Bussy; Kostas Kostarelos

Peptide nanofibers (PNFs) are one-dimensional assemblies of amphiphilic peptides in a cylindrical geometry. We postulated that peptide nanofibers (PNFs) can provide the tools for genetic intervention and be used for delivery of siRNA, as they can be engineered with positively charged amino acids that can electrostatically bind siRNA. The aim of this work was to investigate the use of PNFs as vectors for siRNA delivery providing effective gene knockdown. We designed a surfactant-like peptide (palmitoyl-GGGAAAKRK) able to self-assemble into PNFs and demonstrated that complexes of PNF:siRNA are uptaken intracellularly and increase the residence time of siRNA in the brain after intracranial administration. The biological activity of the complexes was investigated in vitro by analyzing the down-regulation of the expression of a targeted protein (BCL2), as well as induction of apoptosis, as well as in vivo by analyzing the relative gene expression upon stereotactic administration into a deep rat brain structure (the subthalamic nucleus). Gene expression levels of BCL2 mRNA showed that PNF:siBCL2 constructs were able to silence the target BCL2 in specific loci of the brain. Silencing of the BCL2 gene resulted in ablation of neuronal cell populations, indicating that genetic interventions by PNF:siRNA complexes may lead to novel treatment strategies of CNS pathologies.


Faraday Discussions | 2013

Peptide Nanofibres As Molecular Transporters: From Self-Assembly To In-vivo Degradation

Mariarosa Mazza; Avnish Patel; Ramon Pons; Cyrill Bussy; Kostas Kostarelos

Peptide nanofibres (PNFs) have gained increasing interest as engineered biomaterials for drug delivery and tissue repair because of the versatility in design they offer through the self-assembly of amphiphilic peptide molecules. Their self-assembly is governed by hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds between peptide sequences able to form beta-sheets. In this report, we describe the self-assembly of PNFs by using palmitoyl-peptide molecules containing two different cationic amino acid sequences and offer a description of the nanofiber physicochemical characteristics. The structural degradation of these PNFs in physiologically-relevant media was evaluated experimentally and two mechanisms are proposed. We also piloted the tracking of PNFs intracellularly in vitro, upon interaction with primary neuronal cultures, and intracranially in vivo, after stereotactic administration deep within the brain using two types of fluorescent labelled PNFs. Overall, the self-assembled PNFs were seen to internalise within neurons and be removed or degrade in the brain. Further work is needed to determine the utility of such PNFs as molecular transporters within neuronal tissue.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

The application of nanotechnology in medicine: Treatment and diagnostics

Andrew Owen; Christine Dufès; Davide Moscatelli; Eric Mayes; Jonathan F. Lovell; Kattesh V. Katti; Konstantin Sokolov; Mariarosa Mazza; Olivier M.A. Fontaine; Steve P. Rannard; Vicki Stone

Nanomedicine 2014 Edinburgh, UK, 26-27 March 2014 The British Society for Nanomedicine (BSNM), in collaboration with SELECTBIO, organized Nanomedicine 2014. BSNM is a registered charity created to allow open access for industry, academia, clinicians and the public to news and details of ongoing nanomedicine research. The Nanomedicine 2014 program provided insight across a number of emerging nanotechnologies spanning treatment to diagnostics. A key objective of the meeting was provision of opportunities to build collaborations and rationalize nanoenabled healthcare solutions.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2017

Liposome-Indocyanine Green Nanoprobes for Optical Labeling and Tracking of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells Post-Transplantation In Vivo

Mariarosa Mazza; Neus Lozano; Debora Braga Vieira; Maurizio Buggio; Cay M. Kielty; Kostas Kostarelos

Direct labeling of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) prior to transplantation provides a means to track cells after administration and it is a powerful tool for the assessment of new cell-based therapies. Biocompatible nanoprobes consisting of liposome-indocyanine green hybrid vesicles (liposome-ICG) are used to safely label hMSC. Labeled hMSC recapitulating a 3D cellular environment is transplanted as spheroids subcutaneously and intracranially in athymic nude mice. Cells emit a strong NIR signal used for tracking post-transplantation with the IVIS imaging system up to 2 weeks (subcutaneous) and 1 week (intracranial). The transplanted stem cells are imaged in situ after engraftment deep in the brain up to 1 week in living animals using optical imaging techniques and without the need to genetically modify the cells. This method is proposed for efficient, nontoxic direct cell labeling for the preclinical assessment of cell-based therapies and the design of clinical trials, and potentially for localization of the cell engraftment after transplantation into patients.


ACS Nano | 2015

In Vivo Biomolecule Corona around Blood-Circulating, Clinically Used and Antibody-Targeted Lipid Bilayer Nanoscale Vesicles

Marilena Hadjidemetriou; Zahraa S. Al-Ahmady; Mariarosa Mazza; Richard F. Collins; Kenneth A. Dawson; Kostas Kostarelos


Advanced Materials | 2015

Nanomedicine: Controlled In Vivo Swimming of a Swarm of Bacteria‐Like Microrobotic Flagella (Adv. Mater. 19/2015)

Ania Servant; Famin Qiu; Mariarosa Mazza; Kostas Kostarelos; Bradley J. Nelson

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Ania Servant

University College London

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Cyrill Bussy

University of Manchester

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Neus Lozano

University of Manchester

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