Paulo Jacob Silva
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paulo Jacob Silva.
Nature Communications | 2014
Reid C. Van Lehn; Maria Ricci; Paulo Jacob Silva; Patrizia Andreozzi; Javier Reguera; Kislon Voïtchovsky; Francesco Stellacci; Alfredo Alexander-Katz
Recent work has demonstrated that charged gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) protected by an amphiphilic organic monolayer can spontaneously insert into the core of lipid bilayers to minimize the exposure of hydrophobic surface area to water. However, the kinetic pathway to reach the thermodynamically stable transmembrane configuration is unknown. Here, we use unbiased atomistic simulations to show the pathway by which AuNPs spontaneously insert into bilayers and confirm the results experimentally on supported lipid bilayers. The critical step during this process is hydrophobic-hydrophobic contact between the core of the bilayer and the monolayer of the AuNP that requires the stochastic protrusion of an aliphatic lipid tail into solution. This last phenomenon is enhanced in the presence of high bilayer curvature and closely resembles the putative pre-stalk transition state for vesicle fusion. To the best of our knowledge, this work provides the first demonstration of vesicle fusion-like behaviour in an amphiphilic nanoparticle system.
Nature Materials | 2017
Valeria Cagno; Patrizia Andreozzi; Marco D’Alicarnasso; Paulo Jacob Silva; Marie Mueller; Marie Galloux; Ronan Le Goffic; Samuel T. Jones; Marta Vallino; Jan Hodek; Jan Weber; Soumyo Sen; Emma-Rose Janeček; Ahmet Bekdemir; Barbara Sanavio; Chiara Martinelli; Manuela Donalisio; Marie-Anne Rameix Welti; Jean-François Eléouët; Yanxiao Han; Laurent Kaiser; Lela Vuković; Caroline Tapparel; Petr Král; Silke Krol; David Lembo; Francesco Stellacci
Viral infections kill millions yearly. Available antiviral drugs are virus-specific and active against a limited panel of human pathogens. There are broad-spectrum substances that prevent the first step of virus-cell interaction by mimicking heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG), the highly conserved target of viral attachment ligands (VALs). The reversible binding mechanism prevents their use as a drug, because, upon dilution, the inhibition is lost. Known VALs are made of closely packed repeating units, but the aforementioned substances are able to bind only a few of them. We designed antiviral nanoparticles with long and flexible linkers mimicking HSPG, allowing for effective viral association with a binding that we simulate to be strong and multivalent to the VAL repeating units, generating forces (∼190 pN) that eventually lead to irreversible viral deformation. Virucidal assays, electron microscopy images, and molecular dynamics simulations support the proposed mechanism. These particles show no cytotoxicity, and in vitro nanomolar irreversible activity against herpes simplex virus (HSV), human papilloma virus, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), dengue and lenti virus. They are active ex vivo in human cervicovaginal histocultures infected by HSV-2 and in vivo in mice infected with RSV.
Nature Communications | 2016
Maria Pelliccia; Patrizia Andreozzi; Jayson Paulose; Marco D'Alicarnasso; Valeria Cagno; Manuela Donalisio; Andrea Civra; Rebecca Broeckel; Nicole Haese; Paulo Jacob Silva; Randy P. Carney; Varpu Marjomäki; Daniel N. Streblow; David Lembo; Francesco Stellacci; Vincenzo Vitelli; Silke Krol
Up to 80% of the cost of vaccination programmes is due to the cold chain problem (that is, keeping vaccines cold). Inexpensive, biocompatible additives to slow down the degradation of virus particles would address the problem. Here we propose and characterize additives that, already at very low concentrations, improve the storage time of adenovirus type 5. Anionic gold nanoparticles (10−8–10−6 M) or polyethylene glycol (PEG, molecular weight ∼8,000 Da, 10−7–10−4 M) increase the half-life of a green fluorescent protein expressing adenovirus from ∼48 h to 21 days at 37 °C (from 7 to >30 days at room temperature). They replicate the known stabilizing effect of sucrose, but at several orders of magnitude lower concentrations. PEG and sucrose maintained immunogenicity in vivo for viruses stored for 10 days at 37 °C. To achieve rational design of viral-vaccine stabilizers, our approach is aided by simplified quantitative models based on a single rate-limiting step.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017
Fernanda Sousa; Barbara Sanavio; Alessandra Saccani; Yun Tang; Ileana Zucca; Tamara M. Carney; Alfonso Mastropietro; Paulo Jacob Silva; Randy P. Carney; Kurt Schenk; Arash O. Omrani; Ping Huang; L. Yang; Henrik M. Rønnow; Francesco Stellacci; Silke Krol
Nanoparticle-based magnetic resonance imaging T2 negative agents are of great interest, and much effort is devoted to increasing cell-loading capability while maintaining low cytotoxicity. Herein, two classes of mixed-ligand protected magnetic-responsive, bimetallic gold/iron nanoparticles (Au/Fe NPs) synthesized by a two-step method are presented. Their structure, surface composition, and magnetic properties are characterized. The two classes of sulfonated Au/Fe NPs, with an average diameter of 4 nm, have an average atomic ratio of Au to Fe equal to 7 or 8, which enables the Au/Fe NPs to be superparamagnetic with a blocking temperature of 56 K and 96 K. Furthermore, preliminary cellular studies reveal that both Au/Fe NPs show very limited toxicity. MRI phantom experiments show that r2/r1 ratio of Au/Fe NPs is as high as 670, leading to a 66% reduction in T2 relaxation time. These nanoparticles provide great versatility and potential for nanoparticle-based diagnostics and therapeutic applications and as imaging contrast agents.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2018
Prabhani U. Atukorale; Zekiye Pelin Güven; Ahmet Bekdemir; Randy P. Carney; Reid C. Van Lehn; Dong Soo Yun; Paulo Jacob Silva; Davide Demurtas; Yu-Sang Sabrina Yang; Alfredo Alexander-Katz; Francesco Stellacci; Darrell J. Irvine
The development of synthetic nanomaterials that could embed within, penetrate, or induce fusion between membranes without permanent disruption would have great significance for biomedical applications. Here we describe structure-function relationships of highly water-soluble gold nanoparticles comprised of an ∼1.5-5 nm diameter metal core coated by an amphiphilic organic ligand shell, which exhibit membrane embedding and fusion activity mediated by the surface ligands. Using an environment-sensitive dye anchored within the ligand shell as a sensor of membrane embedding, we demonstrate that particles with core sizes of ∼2-3 nm are capable of embedding within and penetrating fluid bilayers. At the nanoscale, these particles also promote spontaneous fusion of liposomes or spontaneously embed within intact liposomal vesicles. These studies provide nanoparticle design and selection principles that could be used in drug delivery applications, as membrane stains, or for the creation of novel organic/inorganic nanomaterial self-assemblies.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006
Alicia M. Jackson; Ying Hu; Paulo Jacob Silva; Francesco Stellacci
ACS Nano | 2013
Quy Khac Ong; Javier Reguera; Paulo Jacob Silva; Mauro Moglianetti; Kellen M. Harkness; Maria Longobardi; Kunal S. Mali; Christoph Renner; Steven De Feyter; Francesco Stellacci
ACS Nano | 2013
Randy P. Carney; Yann Astier; Tamara M. Carney; Kislon Voïtchovsky; Paulo Jacob Silva; Francesco Stellacci
Nanoscale | 2015
Prabhani U. Atukorale; Yu Sang Yang; Ahmet Bekdemir; Randy P. Carney; Paulo Jacob Silva; Nicki Watson; Francesco Stellacci; Darrell J. Irvine
ACS Nano | 2018
Alysia Cox; Patrizia Andreozzi; Roberta Dal Magro; Fabio Fiordaliso; Alessandro Corbelli; Laura Talamini; Clizia Chinello; Francesca Raimondo; Fulvio Magni; Maria Tringali; Silke Krol; Paulo Jacob Silva; Francesco Stellacci; Massimo Masserini; Francesca Re