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Dive into the research topics where Marzia Marciello is active.

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Featured researches published by Marzia Marciello.


Langmuir | 2016

Effect of Nanoclustering and Dipolar Interactions in Heat Generation for Magnetic Hyperthermia.

D. F. Coral; Pedro Mendoza Zélis; Marzia Marciello; Maria del Puerto Morales; Aldo Craievich; F. H. Sánchez; Marcela B. Fernández van Raap

Biomedical magnetic colloids commonly used in magnetic hyperthermia experiments often display a bidisperse structure, i.e., are composed of stable nanoclusters coexisting with well-dispersed nanoparticles. However, the influence of nanoclusters in the optimization of colloids for heat dissipation is usually excluded. In this work, bidisperse colloids are used to analyze the effect of nanoclustering and long-range magnetic dipolar interaction on the magnetic hyperthermia efficiency. Two kinds of colloids, composed of magnetite cores with mean sizes of around 10 and 18 nm, coated with oleic acid and dispersed in hexane, and coated with meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid and dispersed in water, were analyzed. Small-angle X-ray scattering was applied to thoroughly characterize nanoparticle structuring. We proved that the magnetic hyperthermia performances of nanoclusters and single nanoparticles are distinctive. Nanoclustering acts to reduce the specific heating efficiency whereas a peak against concentration appears for the well-dispersed component. Our experiments show that the heating efficiency of a magnetic colloid can increase or decrease when dipolar interactions increase and that the colloid concentration, i.e., dipolar interaction, can be used to improve magnetic hyperthermia. We have proven that the power dissipated by an ensemble of dispersed magnetic nanoparticles becomes a nonextensive property as a direct consequence of the long-range nature of dipolar interactions. This knowledge is a key point in selecting the correct dose that has to be injected to achieve the desired outcome in intracellular magnetic hyperthermia therapy.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2012

Different strategies to enhance the activity of lipase catalysts

Marzia Marciello; Marco Filice; Jose M. Palomo

The design of new strategies for improving the catalytic activity of lipases in their application on non-natural substrates is in great demand due to their biotechnological applications. This perspective illustrates the power of technologies, such as the immobilization of enzymes on nanomaterials and the site-specific chemical modification of enzyme surfaces, to prepare highly active semisynthetic lipases. These techniques have produced optimal biocatalysts for different important bioprocesses such as biodiesel production, regioselective deprotection of carbohydrates and kinetic resolution of different drug precursors.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015

Effects of phase transfer ligands on monodisperse iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles

Susana Palma; Marzia Marciello; Alexandra Carvalho; Sabino Veintemillas-Verdaguer; Maria del Puerto Morales; Ana C. A. Roque

Oleic acid coated iron oxide nanoparticles synthesized by thermal decomposition in organic medium are highly monodisperse but at the same time are unsuitable for biological applications. Ligand-exchange reactions are useful to make their surface hydrophilic. However, these could alter some structural and magnetic properties of the modified particles. Here we present a comprehensive study and comparison of the effects of employing either citric acid (CA) or meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) ligand-exchange protocols for phase transfer of monodisperse hydrophobic iron oxide nanoparticles produced by thermal decomposition of Fe(acac)3 in benzyl ether. We show the excellent hydrodynamic size distribution and colloidal stability of the hydrophilic particles obtained by the two protocols and confirm that there is a certain degree of oxidation caused by the ligand-exchange. CA revealed to be more aggressive towards the iron oxide surface than DMSA and greatly reduced the saturation magnetization values and initial susceptibility of the resulting particles compared to the native ones. Besides being milder and more straightforward to perform, the DMSA ligand exchange protocol produces MNP chemically more versatile for further functionalization possibilities. This versatility is shown through the covalent linkage of gum Arabic onto MNP-DMSA using carboxyl and thiol based chemical routes and yielding particles with comparable properties.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2013

Large scale production of biocompatible magnetite nanocrystals with high saturation magnetization values through green aqueous synthesis

Marzia Marciello; Vincent Connord; Sabino Veintemillas-Verdaguer; Manuel Andrés Vergés; J. Carrey; M. Respaud; Carlos J. Serna; M. Puerto Morales

In this work, a straightforward aqueous synthesis for mass production (up to 20 g) of uniform and crystalline magnetite nanoparticles with core sizes between 20 and 30 nm, which are the optimum nanoparticle core sizes for hyperthermia applications, is proposed. Magnetic and heating properties have been analyzed showing very high saturation magnetization and magnetic heating values. To stabilize the naked magnetite nanocrystals at physiological pH and increase their circulation time in blood, they have been covalently coated with carboxymethyl dextran, a biocompatible polymer. The influence of this superficial modification on the magnetic and heating properties has been studied showing that these biocompatible magnetic nanocrystals maintain high saturation magnetization values, good colloidal stability and hyperthermia properties in the presence of the polymeric external layer. These particles, suitably functionalized, could be used to selectively kill cancer cells under a moderate alternating magnetic field (44 mT and 70 kHz).


Biotechnology Progress | 2011

Hydrolysis of fish oil by hyperactivated rhizomucor miehei lipase immobilized by multipoint anion exchange

Marco Filice; Marzia Marciello; Lorena Betancor; Alfonso V. Carrascosa; Jose M. Guisan; Gloria Fernández-Lorente

Rhizomucor miehei lipase (RML) is greatly hyperactivated (around 20‐ to 25‐fold toward small substrates) in the presence of sucrose laurate. Hyperactivation appears to be an intramolecular process because it is very similar for soluble enzymes and covalently immobilized derivatives. The hyperactivated enzyme was immobilized (in the presence of sucrose laurate) on cyanogen bromide‐activated Sepharose (very mild covalent immobilization through the amino terminal residue), on glyoxyl Sepharose (intense multipoint covalent immobilization through the region with the highest amount of Lys residues), and on different anion exchangers (by multipoint anionic exchange through the region with the highest density of negative charges). Covalent immobilization does not promote the fixation of the hyperactivated enzyme, but immobilization on Sepharose Q retains the hyperactivated enzyme even in the absence of a detergent. The hydrolysis of fish oils by these hyperactivated enzyme derivatives was sevenfold faster than by covalently immobilized derivatives and three and a half times faster than by the enzyme hyperactivated on octyl‐Sepharose. The open structure of the hyperactivated lipase is fairly exposed to the medium, and no steric hindrance should interfere with the hydrolysis of large substrates. These new hyperactivated derivatives seem to be more suitable for hydrolysis of oils by RML immobilized inside porous supports. In addition, the hyperactivated derivatives are fairly stable against heat and organic cosolvents.


Scientific Reports | 2016

In-situ particles reorientation during magnetic hyperthermia application: Shape matters twice

K. Simeonidis; M. Puerto Morales; Marzia Marciello; Makis Angelakeris; Patricia de la Presa; Ana Lazaro-Carrillo; Andrea Tabero; Angeles Villanueva; O. Chubykalo-Fesenko; David Serantes

Promising advances in nanomedicine such as magnetic hyperthermia rely on a precise control of the nanoparticle performance in the cellular environment. This constitutes a huge research challenge due to difficulties for achieving a remote control within the human body. Here we report on the significant double role of the shape of ellipsoidal magnetic nanoparticles (nanorods) subjected to an external AC magnetic field: first, the heat release is increased due to the additional shape anisotropy; second, the rods dynamically reorientate in the orthogonal direction to the AC field direction. Importantly, the heating performance and the directional orientation occur in synergy and can be easily controlled by changing the AC field treatment duration, thus opening the pathway to combined hyperthermic/mechanical nanoactuators for biomedicine. Preliminary studies demonstrate the high accumulation of nanorods into HeLa cells whereas viability analysis supports their low toxicity and the absence of apoptotic or necrotic cell death after 24 or 48 h of incubation.


Contrast Media & Molecular Imaging | 2015

Covalent coupling of gum arabic onto superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles for MRI cell labeling: physicochemical and in vitro characterization

Susana Palma; Alexandra Carvalho; Joana Silva; Pedro Martins; Marzia Marciello; Alexandra R. Fernandes; Maria del Puerto Morales; Ana C. A. Roque

Gum arabic (GA) is a hydrophilic composite polysaccharide derived from exudates of Acacia senegal and Acacia seyal trees. It is biocompatible, possesses emulsifying and stabilizing properties and has been explored as coating agent of nanomaterials for biomedical applications, namely magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). Previous studies focused on the adsorption of GA onto MNPs produced by co-precipitation methods. In this work, MNPs produced by a thermal decomposition method, known to produce uniform particles with better crystalline properties, were used for the covalent coupling of GA through its free amine groups, which increases the stability of the coating layer. The MNPs were produced by thermal decomposition of Fe(acac)3 in organic solvent and, after ligand-exchange with meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA), GA coating was achieved by the establishment of a covalent bond between DMSA and GA moieties. Clusters of several magnetic cores entrapped in a shell of GA were obtained, with good colloidal stability and promising magnetic relaxation properties (r2 /r1 ratio of 350). HCT116 colorectal carcinoma cell line was used for in vitro cytotoxicity evaluation and cell-labeling efficiency studies. We show that, upon administration at the respective IC50 , GA coating enhances MNP cellular uptake by 19 times compared to particles bearing only DMSA moieties. Accordingly, in vitro MR images of cells incubated with increasing concentrations of GA-coated MNP present dose-dependent contrast enhancement. The obtained results suggest that the GA magnetic nanosystem could be used as a MRI contrast agent for cell-labeling applications.


Current Organic Chemistry | 2013

Enzymatic Synthesis of Oligosaccharides: A Powerful Tool for a Sweet Challenge

Marco Filice; Marzia Marciello

Carbohydrates are complex and structurally diverse compounds in nature with key roles in a broad range of life processes in- cluding signal transduction, carcinogenesis and immune responses. Many natural products contain oligosaccharides that are vital for their biological activity. Despite ongoing challenges, tremendous progresses have been made in recent years for the synthesis of carbohydrates. The chemical glycosylation methods have become more sophisticated and the synthesis of oligosaccharides has become more predict- able. Nonetheless, thanks to their straightforward stereoselectivity and efficiency, carbohydrate-processing enzymes follow being a pow- erful practical alternative in a wide set of synthetic applications targeted to the obtainment of natural oligosaccharides, glycoconjugates and their analogues. In this review, recurring to many practical examples, a general updated overview of the behavior, the advantages and the drawbacks related to the application of glycosyltransferases, glycosylhydrolases and glycosynthases in the oligosaccharide synthesis will be provided.


Biomacromolecules | 2013

Preparation of lipase-coated, stabilized, hydrophobic magnetic particles for reversible conjugation of biomacromolecules

Marzia Marciello; Juan M. Bolivar; Marco Filice; Cesar Mateo; Jose M. Guisan

This Communication presents the development of a novel strategy for the easy conjugation of biomolecules to hydrophobic magnetic microparticles via reversible coating with previously functionalized lipase molecules. First, the ability of lipase to be strongly adsorbed onto hydrophobic surfaces was exploited for the stabilization of microparticles in aqueous medium by the creation of a hydrophilic surface. Second, the surface amino acids of lipase can be tailored to suit biomolecule conjugation. This approach has been demonstrated by amino-epoxy activation of lipase, enabling the conjugation of different biomolecules to the magnetic particles surface. For example, it was possible to immobilize 70% of Escherichia coli proteins on the recovered particles. Furthermore, this strategy could be extended to other lipase chemical modification protocols, enabling fine control of biomolecule coupling. These conjugation techniques constitute a modular methodology that also permits the recycling of the magnetic carrier following use.


Langmuir | 2014

Useful oriented immobilization of antibodies on chimeric magnetic particles: direct correlation of biomacromolecule orientation with biological activity by AFM studies.

Marzia Marciello; Marco Filice; David Olea; Marisela Vélez; Jose M. Guisan; Cesar Mateo

The preparation and performance of a suitable chimeric biosensor based on antibodies (Abs) immobilized on lipase-coated magnetic particles by means of a standing orienting strategy are presented. This novel system is based on hydrophobic magnetic particles coated with modified lipase molecules able to orient and further immobilize different Abs in a covalent way without any previous site-selective chemical modification of biomacromolecules. Different key parameters attending the process were studied and optimized. The optimal preparation was performed using a controlled loading (1 nmol Ab g(-1) chimeric support) at pH 9 and a short reaction time to recover a biological activity of about 80%. AFM microscopy was used to study and confirm the Abs-oriented immobilization on lipase-coated magnetic particles and the final achievement of a highly active and recyclable chimeric immune sensor. This direct technique was demonstrated to be a powerful alternative to the indirect immunoactivity assay methods for the study of biomacromolecule-oriented immobilizations.

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Maria del Puerto Morales

Spanish National Research Council

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Marco Filice

Spanish National Research Council

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Jose M. Guisan

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos J. Serna

Spanish National Research Council

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Cesar Mateo

Spanish National Research Council

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Jose M. Palomo

Spanish National Research Council

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Gloria Fernández-Lorente

Spanish National Research Council

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M. Puerto Morales

Spanish National Research Council

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Alicia Baldessari

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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