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Dive into the research topics where Marjorie Lismont is active.

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Featured researches published by Marjorie Lismont.


Biomaterials | 2017

Positioning metal-organic framework nanoparticles within the context of drug delivery – A comparison with mesoporous silica nanoparticles and dendrimers

Stefan Wuttke; Marjorie Lismont; Alberto Escudero; Bunyarat Rungtaweevoranit; Wolfgang J. Parak

Nanotechnology enables the creation of delivery vehicles able to overcome physiologically imposed barriers, allowing new approaches for reducing the unwanted side effects of systemic delivery of drug, increasing targeting efficiency and so improving therapy efficacy. Owing to the considerable advances in material sciences and pharmaceutics, a broad range of different inorganic or organic drug nanocarriers have been developed. Furthermore, researchers have shown that the combination of inorganic and organic chemistries in one single material, named metal-organic framework (MOF), offers structural designability at the molecular level together with tunable porosity and chemical functionalisability. While the MOF size can be controlled at the nanometer scale, these features are of paramount interest in the development of the next generation of drug delivery systems. After a short state-of-the-art about MOF technology and within the drug delivery context, this paper discusses the benefits of using MOF nanoparticles compared to dendrimers and mesoporous silica nanoparticles in order to understand the challenges that must still be overcome.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2012

Comparative study of Ag and Au nanoparticles biosensors based on surface plasmon resonance phenomenon

Marjorie Lismont; Laurent Dreesen

The specific sensitivity of surface plasmon resonance to changes in the local environment of nanoparticles allows their use as platforms to probe chemical and biochemical binding events on their surfaces without any labeling [1-4]. In this paper, we perform a comparative study of gold and silver nanoparticle based biosensors, prepared within the same conditions, in order to determine which metal seems the best for biological sensing. The prototypical biocytin-avidin interaction is used to study gradual changes over time and with avidin concentration in the absorption spectra bands of biocytinylated 10 nm silver and gold nanospheres. First, the Ag nanoparticles plasmon resonance absorbance signal is about 10 times larger than the Au one. Secondly, for an equivalent concentration of avidin, the optical property modifications are more pronounced for silver nanoparticles than for gold ones of the same geometry. These observations attest the superiority of Ag on Au nanoparticles when optical considerations are only taken into account. Finally, with both biosensors, the specificity of the interaction, checked by replacing avidin with bovine serum albumin, is relatively poor and needs to be improved.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015

A one-step short-time synthesis of Ag@SiO2 core-shell nanoparticles

Marjorie Lismont; Carlos A. Páez; Laurent Dreesen

A performance of shell-thickness precise control in silver-silica coating core-shell nanoparticles is presented. 60nm sized citrate-stabilized silver nanoparticles are directly silica coated using a modified Stöber process. Tetraethyl orthosilicate is used as a silica precursor and ammonium hydroxide as catalyst in an alcoholic solvent to promote the seeded silica growth. By simply varying the synthesis reaction time from 4 to 60min, the silica shell thickness is increased from 5.1nm to 76.4nm. This well-controlled synthesis is then transposed to 40, 80 and 100nm sized silver cores in order to show the independence of the silica shell growth on the nanoparticle core size. Optical properties, i.e. localized surface plasmon resonance, of the produced silver-silica core-shell are also investigated.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010

ESR technique for noninvasive way to quantify cyclodextrins effect on cell membranes.

Angeliki Grammenos; Ange Mouithys-Mickalad; Pierre-Henri Guelluy; Marjorie Lismont; Géraldine Piel; Maryse Hoebeke

A new way to study the action of cyclodextrin was developed to quantify the damage caused on cell membrane and lipid bilayer. The Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) spectroscopy was used to study the action of Randomly methylated-beta-cyclodextrin (Rameb) on living cells (HCT-116). The relative anisotropy observed in ESR spectrum of nitroxide spin probe (5-DSA and cholestane) is directly related to the rotational mobility of the probe, which can be further correlated with the microviscosity. The use of ESR probes clearly shows a close correlation between cholesterol contained in cells and cellular membrane microviscosity. This study also demonstrates the Rameb ability to extract cholesterol and phospholipids in time- and dose-dependent ways. In addition, ESR spectra enabled to establish that cholesterol is extracted from lipid rafts to form stable aggregates. The present work supports that ESR is an easy, reproducible and noninvasive technique to study the effect of cyclodextrins on cell membranes.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015

Linear and nonlinear optical properties of functionalized CdSe quantum dots prepared by plasma sputtering and wet chemistry

Christophe Humbert; Abdellatif Dahi; Laetitia Dalstein; Bertrand Busson; Marjorie Lismont; Pierre Colson; Laurent Dreesen

We develop an innovative manufacturing process, based on radio-frequency magnetron sputtering (RFMS), to prepare neat CdSe quantum dots (QDs) on glass and silicon substrates and further chemically functionalize them. In order to validate the fabrication protocol, their optical properties are compared with those of QDs obtained from commercial solutions and deposited by wet chemistry on the substrates. Firstly, AFM measurements attest that nano-objects with a mean diameter around 13 nm are located on the substrate after RFMS treatment. Secondly, the UV-Vis absorption study of this deposited layer shows a specific optical absorption band, located at 550 nm, which is related to a discrete energy level of QDs. Thirdly, by using two-color sum-frequency generation (2C-SFG) nonlinear optical spectroscopy, we show experimentally the functionalization efficiency of the RFMS CdSe QDs layer with thiol derived molecules, which is not possible on the QDs layer prepared by wet chemistry due to the surfactant molecules from the native solution. Finally, 2C-SFG spectroscopy, performed at different visible wavelengths, highlights modifications of the vibration mode shape whatever the QDs deposition method, which is correlated to the discrete energy level of the QDs.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Fiber based optofluidic biosensors

Marjorie Lismont; Nicolas Vandewalle; Bernard Joris; Laurent Dreesen

Medicinal diagnosis requires the development of innovative devices allowing the detection of small amounts of biological species. Among the large variety of available biosensors, the ones based on fluorescence phenomenon are really promising. Here, we show a prototype of the basic unit of a multi-sensing biosensor combining optics and microfluidics benefits. This unit makes use of two crossed optical fibers: the first fiber is used to carry small probe molecules droplets and excite fluorescence, while the second one is devoted to target molecules droplets transport and fluorescence detection. Within this scheme, the interaction takes place in each fiber node. The main benefits of this detection setup are the absence of fibers functionalization, the use of microliter volumes of target and probe species, their separation before interaction, and a better detection limit compared to cuvettes setups.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2016

Protoporphyrin IX Functionalised AgSiO2 Core-shell Nanoparticle: Plasmonic Enhancement of Fluorescence and Singlet Oxygen Production

Marjorie Lismont; Laurent Dreesen; Benoît Heinrichs; Carlos A. Páez

Metal‐enhanced processes arising from the coupling of a dye with metallic nanoparticles (NPs) have been widely reported. However, few studies have simultaneously investigated these mechanisms from the viewpoint of dye fluorescence and photoactivity. Herein, protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) is grafted onto the surface of silver core silica shell NPs in order to investigate the effect of silver (Ag) localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) on PpIX fluorescence and PpIX singlet oxygen (1O2) production. Using two Ag core sizes, we report a systematic study of these photophysical processes as a function of silica (SiO2) spacer thickness, LSPR band position and excitation wavelength. The excitation of Ag NP LSPR, which overlaps the PpIX absorption band, leads to the concomitant enhancement of PpIX fluorescence and 1O2 production independently of the Ag core size, but in a more pronounced way for larger Ag cores. These enhancements result from the increase in the PpIX excitation rate through the LSPR excitation and decrease when the distance between PpIX and Ag NPs increases. A maximum fluorescence enhancement of up to 14‐fold, together with an increase in photogenerated 1O2 production of up to five times are obtained using 100 nm Ag cores coated with a 5 nm thick silica coating.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Metal‐Organic Framework Nanoparticles in Photodynamic Therapy: Current Status and Perspectives

Marjorie Lismont; Laurent Dreesen; Stefan Wuttke


Soft Matter | 2015

Compound droplet manipulations on fiber arrays

Floriane Weyer; Marjorie Lismont; Laurent Dreesen; Nicolas Vandewalle


Journal of Chemical Education | 2017

Exploring the Fundamentals of Microreactor Technology with Multidisciplinary Lab Experiments Combining the Synthesis and Characterization of Inorganic Nanoparticles

Noémie Emmanuel; Gauthier Emonds-Alt; Marjorie Lismont; Gauthier Eppe; Jean-Christophe Monbaliu

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