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Dive into the research topics where Michael C. Howland is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael C. Howland.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Affinity and enzyme-based biosensors: recent advances and emerging applications in cell analysis and point-of-care testing

Ying Liu; Zimple Matharu; Michael C. Howland; Alexander Revzin; Aleksandr Simonian

AbstractThe applications of biosensors range from environmental testing and biowarfare agent detection to clinical testing and cell analysis. In recent years, biosensors have become increasingly prevalent in clinical testing and point-of-care testing. This is driven in part by the desire to decrease the cost of health care, to shift some of the analytical tests from centralized facilities to “frontline” physicians and nurses, and to obtain more precise information more quickly about the health status of a patient. This article gives an overview of recent advances in the field of biosensors, focusing on biosensors based on enzymes, aptamers, antibodies, and phages. In addition, this article attempts to describe efforts to apply these biosensors to clinical testing and cell analysis. FigureBiosensor for Point of care


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2009

Micropatterning of Proteins and Mammalian Cells on Indium Tin Oxide

Sunny S. Shah; Michael C. Howland; Li Jung Chen; Jaime Silangcruz; Stanislav V. Verkhoturov; E. A. Schweikert; Atul N. Parikh; Alexander Revzin

This paper describes a novel surface engineering approach that combines oxygen plasma treatment and electrochemical activation to create micropatterned cocultures on indium tin oxide (ITO) substrates. In this approach, photoresist was patterned onto an ITO substrate modified with poly(ethylene) glycol (PEG) silane. The photoresist served as a stencil during exposure of the surface to oxygen plasma. Upon incubation with collagen (I) solution and removal of the photoresist, the ITO substrate contained collagen regions surrounded by nonfouling PEG silane. Chemical analysis carried out with time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) at different stages in micropatterned construction verified removal of PEG-silane during oxygen plasma and presence of collagen and PEG molecules on the same surface. Imaging ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy (AFM) were employed to further investigate micropatterned ITO surfaces. Biological application of this micropatterning strategy was demonstrated through selective attachment of mammalian cells on the ITO substrate. Importantly, after seeding the first cell type, the ITO surfaces could be activated by applying negative voltage (-1.4 V vs Ag/AgCl). This resulted in removal of nonfouling PEG layer and allowed to attach another cell type onto the same surface and to create micropatterned cocultures. Micropatterned cocultures of primary hepatocytes and fibroblasts created by this strategy remained functional after 9 days as verified by analysis of hepatic albumin. The novel surface engineering strategy described here may be used to pattern multiple cell types on an optically transparent and conductive substrate and is envisioned to have applications in tissue engineering and biosensing.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Early stages of oxidative stress-induced membrane permeabilization: a neutron reflectometry study.

Hillary L. Smith; Michael C. Howland; Alan W. Szmodis; Qijuan Li; Luke L. Daemen; Atul N. Parikh; Jaroslaw Majewski

Neutron reflectometry was used to probe in situ the structure of supported lipid bilayers at the solid-liquid interface during the early stages of UV-induced oxidative degradation. Single-component supported lipid bilayers composed of gel phase, dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), and fluid phase, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), phospholipids were exposed to low-dose oxidative stress generated by UV light and their structures were examined by neutron reflectometry. An interrupted illumination mode, involving exposures in 15 min increments with 2 h intervals between subsequent exposures, and a continuous mode involving a single 60 (or 90) min exposure period were employed. In both cases, pronounced differences in the structure of the lipid bilayer after exposure were observed. Interrupted exposure led to a substantial decrease in membrane coverage but preserved its total thickness at reduced scattering length densities. These results indicate that the initial phase during UV-induced membrane degradation involves the formation of hydrophilic channels within the membrane. This is consistent with the loss of some lipid molecules we observe and attendant reorganization of residual lipids forming hemimicellar edges of the hydrophilic channels. In contrast, continuous illumination produced a graded interface of continuously varied scattering length density (and hence hydrocarbon density) extending 100-150 A into the liquid phase. Exposure of a DPPC bilayer to UV light in the presence of a reservoir of unfused vesicles showed low net membrane disintegration during oxidative stress, presumably because of surface back-filling from the bulk reservoir. Chemical evidence for membrane degradation was obtained by mass spectrometry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Further evidence for the formation of hydrophilic channels was furnished by fluorescence microscopy and imaging ellipsometry data.


Langmuir | 2008

Evidence for leaflet-dependent redistribution of charged molecules in fluid supported phospholipid bilayers.

Andrew P. Shreve; Michael C. Howland; Annapoorna R. Sapuri-Butti; Toby W. Allen; Atul N. Parikh

The asymmetric distribution of charged molecules between the leaflets of solid-substrate-supported phospholipid bilayers is studied using imaging ellipsometry, fluorescence microscopy, and numerical solutions of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation. Experiments are facilitated by the use of patterned substrates that allow for side-by-side comparison of lipid monolayers and supported bilayers. On silica surfaces, negatively charged lipid components are shown to be enriched in the outer leaflet of a supported bilayer system at modest salt concentrations. The approaches developed provide a general means for determining asymmetries of charged components in supported lipid bilayers.


Lab on a Chip | 2008

Protecting, patterning, and scaffolding supported lipid membranes using carbohydrate glasses

Ann E. Oliver; Eric L. Kendall; Michael C. Howland; Babak Sanii; Andrew P. Shreve; Atul N. Parikh

Disaccharides are known to protect sensitive biomolecules against stresses caused by dehydration, both in vivo and in vitro. Here we demonstrate how interfacial accumulation of trehalose can be used to (1) produce rugged supported lipid bilayers capable of near total dehydration; (2) enable spatial patterning of membrane micro-arrays; and (3) form stable bilayers on otherwise lipophobic substrates (e.g., metal transducers) thus affording protecting, patterning, and scaffolding of lipid bilayers.


Advanced Materials | 2011

UNIVERSAL NANOPATTERNABLE INTERFACIAL BONDING

Yuzhe Ding; Shaun P. Garland; Michael C. Howland; Alexander Revzin; Tingrui Pan

A nanopatternable polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) oligomer layer is demonstrated as an interfacial adhesive for its intrinsic transferability and universal adhesiveness. Utilizing the well-established surface modification and bonding techniques of PDMS surfaces, irreversible bonding is formed (up to 400 kPa) between a wide range of substrate pairs, representing ones within and across different materials categories, including metals, ceramics, thermoset, and thermoplastic polymers.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Model Studies of Membrane Disruption by Photogenerated Oxidative Assault

Michael C. Howland; Atul N. Parikh

We have investigated the response of solid-supported phospholipid bilayers to short doses of photogenerated oxidative stress to characterize physical membrane changes during early phases of membrane oxidation. The low-dose oxidative stress is generated by uniformly exposing the bilayer samples using short-wavelength UV radiation (184-257 nm) for short periods (approximately 3 min) and resulting membrane morphological transformations characterized using a combination of wide-field epifluorescence microscopy and imaging ellipsometry measurements. Our results establish that the early phase of membrane oxidation is characterized by the nucleation and growth of discrete microscopic voids within the bilayer. The locations of the voids are randomly distributed throughout the sample surface, despite the uniform illumination. Over longer time scales, the voids continue to grow after the termination of the UV radiation. We also find that the voids heal as sample temperature is raised and that the supported bilayers consisting of fully saturated lipids are less susceptible to the mild oxidation conditions used, regardless of phase state. Analyzing these results in terms of (1) reactive-oxygen species mediated oxidative attack, (2) in situ generation of membrane oxidation products, and (3) their reequilibration between the membrane and the bulk aqueous phase explains the membrane morphological changes observed and provides insights into membrane perturbations following oxidative assault. Specifically, molecular properties of oxidation products (e.g., intrinsic curvature) account for formation and stabilization of voids within contiguous bilayers, and the long-term structural evolution is consistent with slow kinetics of the desorption of these oxidation products from the bilayer into bulk solution. A corollary benefit from our study is that the thermal properties of voids appear to offer a useful means to measure the thermal expansivity of supported membranes.


Soft Matter | 2012

A comparison of detergent action on supported lipid monolayers and bilayers

Viviane N. Ngassam; Michael C. Howland; Annapoorna R. Sapuri-Butti; Nathan Rosidi; Atul N. Parikh

Using spatially patterned supported lipid mono- and bilayers, we compare the effect of transleaflet dynamics on membrane solubilization by a common, non-ionic detergent in single samples. We find that at concentrations surrounding CMC, complete bilayers undergo 5–8% lateral expansion followed by rapid dissolution. In contrast, single supported monolayers remain remarkably resistant to solubilization, suggesting the central role of detergent or lipid flip-flop in driving membrane solubilization. In addition to the previously well-appreciated mode of detergent-resistance by tight lateral packing of saturated and cholesterol-rich lipids (e.g., rafts) in membrane bilayers, our results suggest that hindrance to interleaflet dynamics, such as by strong interaction with the cytoskeleton, provides an alternative mechanism by which membranes resist detergent solubilisation. Furthermore, we show that this differential resistance can be exploited to design spatial compositional patterns of lipid bilayers and monolayers.


international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2012

Universal nano-adhesive of PDMS oligomers

Yuzhe Ding; Shaun P. Garland; Michael C. Howland; Alexander Revzin; Tingrui Pan

A nanopatternable oligomeric PDMS layer has been first reported as a nano-interfacial adhesive for its intrinsic transferability and universal adhesiveness. Utilizing well-established PDMS surface modification and bonding techniques, we have been able to form an irreversible bond between a wide range of substrate pairs, representing ones within and across different material categories, including metals, ceramics, thermoset, and thermoplastic polymers.


Biophysical Journal | 2007

Characterization of physical properties of supported phospholipid membranes using imaging ellipsometry at optical wavelengths

Michael C. Howland; Alan W. Szmodis; Babak Sanii; Atul N. Parikh

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Atul N. Parikh

University of California

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Tingrui Pan

University of California

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Andrew P. Shreve

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Babak Sanii

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Yuzhe Ding

University of California

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Ann E. Oliver

University of California

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