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Dive into the research topics where Nils Carlsson is active.

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Featured researches published by Nils Carlsson.


Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2014

Enzymes Immobilized in Mesoporous Silica: a Physical-Chemical Perspective

Nils Carlsson; Hanna Gustafsson; Christian Thörn; Lisbeth Olsson; Krister Holmberg; Björn Åkerman

Mesoporous materials as support for immobilized enzymes have been explored extensively during the last two decades, primarily not only for biocatalysis applications, but also for biosensing, biofuels and enzyme-controlled drug delivery. The activity of the immobilized enzymes inside the pores is often different compared to that of the free enzymes, and an important challenge is to understand how the immobilization affects the enzymes in order to design immobilization conditions that lead to optimal enzyme activity. This review summarizes methods that can be used to understand how material properties can be linked to changes in enzyme activity. Real-time monitoring of the immobilization process and techniques that demonstrate that the enzymes are located inside the pores is discussed by contrasting them to the common practice of indirectly measuring the depletion of the protein concentration or enzyme activity in the surrounding bulk phase. We propose that pore filling (pore volume fraction occupied by proteins) is the best standard for comparing the amount of immobilized enzymes at the molecular level, and present equations to calculate pore filling from the more commonly reported immobilized mass. Methods to detect changes in enzyme structure upon immobilization and to study the microenvironment inside the pores are discussed in detail. Combining the knowledge generated from these methodologies should aid in rationally designing biocatalyst based on enzymes immobilized in mesoporous materials.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2011

Quantification of protein concentration by the Bradford method in the presence of pharmaceutical polymers.

Nils Carlsson; Annika Borde; Sebastian Wölfel; Björn Åkerman; Anette Larsson

We investigated how the Bradford assay for measurements of protein released from a drug formulation may be affected by a concomitant release of a pharmaceutical polymer used to formulate the protein delivery device. The main result is that polymer-caused perturbations of the Coomassie dye absorbance at the Bradford monitoring wavelength (595nm) can be identified and corrected by recording absorption spectra in the region of 350-850mm. The pharmaceutical polymers Carbopol and chitosan illustrate two potential types of perturbations in the Bradford assay, whereas the third polymer, hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC), acts as a nonperturbing control. Carbopol increases the apparent absorbance at 595nm because the polymer aggregates at the low pH of the Bradford protocol, causing a turbidity contribution that can be corrected quantitatively at 595nm by measuring the sample absorbance at 850nm outside the dye absorption band. Chitosan is a cationic polymer under Bradford conditions and interacts directly with the anionic Coomassie dye and perturbs its absorption spectrum, including 595nm. In this case, the Bradford method remains useful if the polymer concentration is known but should be used with caution in release studies where the polymer concentration may vary and needs to be measured independently.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2011

Direct probing of ion pair formation using a symmetric triangulenium dye

Fredrik Westerlund; Jonas Elm; Jacob Lykkebo; Nils Carlsson; Erling Thyrhaug; Björn Åkerman; Thomas Just Sørensen; Kurt V. Mikkelsen; Bo W. Laursen

The 2,6,10-tris(dialkylamino)trioxatriangulenium dyes (ATOTA(+)) are highly stabilised cationic chromophores with D(3h) symmetry. The symmetry gives rise to a degeneracy of the main electronic transition. In low polarity solvents significant splitting of this degenerate transition is observed and assigned to ion pair formation. Ion pairing of the 2,6,10-tris(dioctylamino)trioxatriangulenium ion with Cl(-), BF(4)(-), PF(6)(-) and TRISPHAT anions was studied using absorption spectroscopy. A clear correlation is found between the size of the anion and the splitting of the ATOTA(+) transitions. In benzene the Cl(-) salt displays a splitting of 1955 cm(-1), while the salt of the much larger TRISPHAT ion has a splitting of 1543 cm(-1). TD-DFT calculations confirm the splitting of the states and provide a detailed insight into the electronic structure of the ion pairs. The different degree of splitting in different ion pairs is found to correlate with the magnitude of the electric field generated in each ion pair, thus leading to the conclusion that the effect seen is an internal Stark effect. By insertion of an amphiphilic derivative of the ATOTA(+) chromophore in an oriented lamellar liquid crystal, it was possible to resolve the two bands of the double peak spectrum and show their perpendicular orientation in the molecular framework, as predicted by the calculations.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012

Membrane interaction and secondary structure of de novo designed arginine-and tryptophan peptides with dual function

Hanna Rydberg; Nils Carlsson; Bengt Nordén

Cell-penetrating peptides and antimicrobial peptides are two classes of positively charged membrane active peptides with several properties in common. The challenge is to combine knowledge about the membrane interaction mechanisms and structural properties of the two classes to design peptides with membrane-specific actions, useful either as transporters of cargo or as antibacterial substances. Membrane active peptides are commonly rich in arginine and tryptophan. We have previously designed a series of arg/trp peptides and investigated how the position and number of tryptophans affect cellular uptake. Here we explore the antimicrobial properties and the interaction with lipid model membranes of these peptides, using minimal inhibitory concentrations assay (MIC), circular dichroism (CD) and linear dichroism (LD). The results show that the arg/trp peptides inhibit the growth of the two gram positive strains Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus pyogenes, with some individual variations depending on the position of the tryptophans. No inhibition of the gram negative strains Proteus mirabilis or Pseudomonas aeruginosa was noticed. CD indicated that when bound to lipid vesicles one of the peptides forms an α-helical like structure, whereas the other five exhibited rather random coiled structures. LD indicated that all six peptides were somehow aligned parallel with the membrane surface. Our results do not reveal any obvious connection between membrane interaction and antimicrobial effect for the studied peptides. By contrast cell-penetrating properties can be coupled to both the secondary structure and the degree of order of the peptides.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2015

A fluorescence spectroscopy assay for real-time monitoring of enzyme immobilization into mesoporous silica particles

Pegah Sadat Nabavi Zadeh; Kassam Abdel Mallak; Nils Carlsson; Björn Åkerman

Mesoporous silica particles are used as support material for immobilization of enzymes. Here we investigated a fluorescence-based assay for real-time monitoring of the immobilization of lipase, bovine serum albumin, and glucose oxidase into micrometer-sized mesoporous silica particles. The proteins are labeled with the dye epicocconone, and the interaction with the particles is observed as an increase in emission intensity of the protein-dye conjugates that can be quantified if correcting for a comparatively slow photobleaching. The immobilization occurs in tens of minutes to hours depending on particle concentration and type of protein. In the limit of excess particles over proteins, the formation of the particle-protein complexes can be described by a single exponential growth for all three investigated proteins, and the fitted pseudo-first-order rate constant increases linearly with particle concentration for each protein type. The derived second-order rate constant k varies with the protein hydrodynamic radius according to k∼RH(-4.70±0.01), indicating that the rate-limiting step at high particle concentrations is not the diffusional encounter between proteins and particles but rather the entry into the pores, consistent with the hydrodynamic radii of the three proteins being smaller but comparable to the pore radius of the particles.


Langmuir | 2012

Spectral properties and orientation of voltage-sensitive dyes in lipid membranes.

Maria Matson; Nils Carlsson; Tamás Beke-Somfai; Bengt Nordén

Voltage-sensitive dyes are frequently used for probing variations in the electric potential across cell membranes. The dyes respond by changing their spectral properties: measured as shifts of wavelength of absorption or emission maxima or as changes of absorption or fluorescence intensity. Although such probes have been studied and used for decades, the mechanism behind their voltage sensitivity is still obscure. We ask whether the voltage response is due to electrochromism as a result of direct field interaction on the chromophore or to solvatochromism, which is the focus of this study, as result of changed environment or molecular alignment in the membrane. The spectral properties of three styryl dyes, di-4-ANEPPS, di-8-ANEPPS, and RH421, were investigated in solvents of varying polarity and in model membranes using spectroscopy. Using quantum mechanical calculations, the spectral dependence of monomer and dimer ANEPPS on solvent properties was modeled. Also, the kinetics of binding to lipid membranes and the binding geometry of the probe molecules were found relevant to address. The spectral properties of all three probes were found to be highly sensitive to the local environment, and the probes are oriented nearly parallel with the membrane normal. Slow binding kinetics and scattering in absorption spectra indicate, especially for di-8-ANEPPS, involvement of aggregation. On the basis of the experimental spectra and time-dependent density functional theory calculations, we find that aggregate formation may contribute to the blue-shifts seen for the dyes in decanol and when bound to membrane models. In conclusion, solvatochromic and other intermolecular interactions effects also need to be included when considering electrochromic response voltage-sensitive dyes.


European Biophysics Journal | 2014

Peptide-membrane interactions of arginine-tryptophan peptides probed using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring.

Hanna Rydberg; Angelika Kunze; Nils Carlsson; Noomi Altgärde; Sofia Svedhem; Bengt Nordén

Membrane-active peptides include peptides that can cross cellular membranes and deliver macromolecular cargo as well as peptides that inhibit bacterial growth. Some of these peptides can act as both transporters and antibacterial agents. It is desirable to combine the knowledge from these two different fields of membrane-active peptides into design of new peptides with tailored actions, as transporters of cargo or as antibacterial substances, targeting specific membranes. We have previously shown that the position of the amino acid tryptophan in the peptide sequence of three arginine-tryptophan peptides affects their uptake and intracellular localization in live mammalian cells, as well as their ability to inhibit bacterial growth. Here, we use quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring to assess the induced changes caused by binding of the three peptides to supported model membranes composed of POPC, POPC/POPG, POPC/POPG/cholesterol or POPC/lactosyl PE. Our results indicate that the tryptophan position in the peptide sequence affects the way these peptides interact with the different model membranes and that the presence of cholesterol in particular seems to affect the membrane interaction of the peptide with an even distribution of tryptophans in the peptide sequence. These results give mechanistic insight into the function of these peptides and may aid in the design of membrane-active peptides with specified cellular targets and actions.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Spectroscopic characterization of Coomassie blue and its binding to amyloid fibrils

Nils Carlsson; Catherine C. Kitts; Björn Åkerman

Coomassie brilliant blue G-250 (CB) is the dye used frequently in the Bradford assay for protein concentration determination. In this study, we investigated how the solvent polarity and viscosity affect the CB absorption and fluorescence spectra and apply this understanding to investigate the binding of CB to lysozyme and insulin in the native and amyloid fibril states. Coomassie blue binds both to the native protein and to amyloid fibrils but gives distinctly different spectral responses. The absorption and fluorescence spectra of CB indicate that binding sites in the fibrils are less polar and hold the CB dye more rigidly than in the native forms. The spectral comparison of CB bound to the two different fibrils showed that the binding sites are different, and this was most likely due to differences in secondary structure as monitored by circular dichroism. Finally, linear dichroism was used to show that the fibril-bound CB is oriented preferentially parallel to the insulin amyloid fibril axis.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Monitoring the Kinetics of Enzyme Immobilization into Mesoporous Silica by Real Time Fluorescence

Pegah Sadat Nabavi Zadeh; Nils Carlsson; Kassam Abdel Mallak; Björn Åkerman

Mesoporous silica particles are used for immobilization of enzymes in order to increase enzyme stability, facilitate product purification and reuse of enzyme. An important question is how the size of the enzyme affects the rate of immobilization and also whether the immobilization rate depends on silica particle concentration.Here, we examine the immobilization of three enzymes with different size. The enzymes used are Lipase, Bovine serum albumin (BSA), Glucose oxidase (Gox) and the diameter of them, respectively, are 4nm, 7nm, and 9nm; while the diameter of the silica particle pores is 9nm. In this research fluorescence spectroscopy is used as a direct monitoring technique. The immobilization is followed by recording the fluorescence from epicocconone, a dye binding to the enzyme.The results show that there is a relation between the size of enzyme and the immobilization rate, the larger the enzyme the slower the rate of immobilization. Also the investigation shows that by increasing mesoporous silica concentration the immobilization rate increases. Further, real-time data on immobilization rate and the enzyme and particle concentration dependence can be used to test models for the immobilization process.View Large Image | View Hi-Res Image | Download PowerPoint Slide


Optical Science and Technology, SPIE's 48th Annual Meeting | 2003

Electrophoretic migration of DNA in lyotropic liquid crystals

Björn Åkerman; Roine Svingen; Nils Carlsson

Lyotripic liquid crystals form highly regular porous matrices with aqueous channels on the nanometer length scale. We have used the cubic phases formed with water by either an amphiphilc block-copolymer (Pluronic F127) or by a lipid (monoolein) for electrophoretic separation of DNA and other biomolecules. Our goal is to use the well-defined pores and the amphiphilic environment to obtain new separation motifs compared to conventional matrices, and to exploit the well-known phase diagrams of these two systems to optimise applications. The Pluronic crystal consists of close-packed micelles and its main advantage is that the cubic phase melts below 10°C, and we show that the separated DNA can be recovered in a biologically active state in preparative applications. Our mechanistic studies revealed that double-stranded DNA undergoes a highly non-conventional (non-reptative) mode of migration, with the helix axis perpendicular to the field direction because the DNA migrates in the grain boundaries of the polycrystalline samples. In contrast to the Pluronic case, the monoolein cubic crystal is bicontinuous, and a main advantage is that it is in equilibrium with a water-rich phase. We exploited this phase-behaviour in the useful sub-marine mode of analytical electrophoresis. The migration of oligonucleotides in the monoolein is strongly retarded compared to free solution and conventional gels, to an extent which is consistent with that migration indeed occurs through the nm-pores. We demonstrate separation of oligonucleotides based on size, and on different types of secondary structure of the same oligonucleotide size, such as the double-stranded, single-stranded and hairpin forms.

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Björn Åkerman

Chalmers University of Technology

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Bengt Nordén

Chalmers University of Technology

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Christian Thörn

Chalmers University of Technology

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Lisbeth Olsson

Chalmers University of Technology

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Catherine C. Kitts

Chalmers University of Technology

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Hanna Gustafsson

Chalmers University of Technology

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Hanna Rydberg

Chalmers University of Technology

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Kassam Abdel Mallak

Chalmers University of Technology

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Krister Holmberg

Chalmers University of Technology

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Marina V. Voinova

Chalmers University of Technology

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