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Dive into the research topics where Peter Walde is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Walde.


ChemBioChem | 2010

Giant vesicles: preparations and applications.

Peter Walde; Katia Cosentino; Helen Engel; Pasquale Stano

There is considerable interest in preparing cell‐sized giant unilamellar vesicles from natural or nonnatural amphiphiles because a giant vesicle membrane resembles the self‐closed lipid matrix of the plasma membrane of all biological cells. Currently, giant vesicles are applied to investigate certain aspects of biomembranes. Examples include lateral lipid heterogeneities, membrane budding and fission, activities of reconstituted membrane proteins, or membrane permeabilization caused by added chemical compounds. One of the challenging applications of giant vesicles include gene expressions inside the vesicles with the ultimate goal of constructing a dynamic artificial cell‐like system that is endowed with all those essential features of living cells that distinguish them from the nonliving form of matter. Although this goal still seems to be far away and currently difficult to reach, it is expected that progress in this and other fields of giant vesicle research strongly depend on whether reliable methods for the reproducible preparation of giant vesicles are available. The key concepts of currently known methods for preparing giant unilamellar vesicles are summarized, and advantages and disadvantages of the main methods are compared and critically discussed.


Journal of Controlled Release | 1997

Interaction of a lecithin microemulsion gel with human stratum corneum and its effect on transdermal transport

F. Dreher; Peter Walde; Paul Walther; Ernst Wehrli

A soybean lecithin microemulsion gel has been studied as a possible matrix for transdermal drug delivery. This gel is transparent and viscous, and it is composed of soybean phosphatidylcholine (lecithin), isopropyl palmitate and a small amount of water. In vitro percutaneous penetration studies of two anti-inflammatory drugs, indomethacin and diclofenac, dissolved in the gel-system resulted in steady state fluxes of about 1 μg h−1 cm−2. In order to estimate the function of the gel as a potential transdermal penetration enhancing system, interaction studies with isolated human stratum corneum were performed using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) as well as low-temperature scanning electron microscopy. These studies indicated that the lecithin gel, in particular isopropyl palmitate, affects the stratum corneum lipid organization even after 1-day incubation (FTIR, DSC), whereas recent in vivo human skin irritation tests showed no significant irritancy.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Enzymatic reactions in confined environments

Andreas Küchler; Makoto Yoshimoto; Sandra Luginbühl; Fabio Mavelli; Peter Walde

Within each biological cell, surface- and volume-confined enzymes control a highly complex network of chemical reactions. These reactions are efficient, timely, and spatially defined. Efforts to transfer such appealing features to in vitro systems have led to several successful examples of chemical reactions catalysed by isolated and immobilized enzymes. In most cases, these enzymes are either bound or adsorbed to an insoluble support, physically trapped in a macromolecular network, or encapsulated within compartments. Advanced applications of enzymatic cascade reactions with immobilized enzymes include enzymatic fuel cells and enzymatic nanoreactors, both for in vitro and possible in vivo applications. In this Review, we discuss some of the general principles of enzymatic reactions confined on surfaces, at interfaces, and inside small volumes. We also highlight the similarities and differences between the in vivo and in vitro cases and attempt to critically evaluate some of the necessary future steps to improve our fundamental understanding of these systems.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Tuning Polymer Thickness: Synthesis and Scaling Theory of Homologous Series of Dendronized Polymers

Yifei Guo; Jacco D. van Beek; Baozhong Zhang; Martin Colussi; Peter Walde; Afang Zhang; Martin Kröger; Avraham Halperin; A. Dieter Schlüter

The thickness of dendronized polymers can be tuned by varying their generation g and the dendron functionality X. Systematic studies of this effect require (i) synthetic ability to produce large samples of high quality polymers with systematic variation of g, X and of the backbone polymerization degree N, (ii) a theoretical model relating the solvent swollen polymer diameter, r, and persistence length, lambda, to g and X. This article presents an optimized synthetic method and a simple theoretical model. Our theory approach, based on the Boris-Rubinstein model of dendrimers predicts r approximately n(1/4)g(1/2) and lambda approximately n(2) where n = [(X - 1)(g) - 1]/(X - 2) is the number of monomers in a dendron. The average monomer concentration in the branched side chains of a dendronized polymer increases with g in qualitative contrast to bottle brushes whose side chains are linear. The stepwise, attach-to, synthesis of X = 3 dendronized polymers yielded gram amounts of g = 1-4 polymers with N approximately = 1000 and N approximately = 7000 as compared to earlier maxima of 0.1 g amounts and of N approximately = 1000. The method can be modified to dendrons of different X. The conversion fraction at each attach-to step, as quantified by converting unreacted groups with UV labels, was 99.3% to 99.8%. Atomic force microscopy on mixed polymer samples allows to distinguish between chains of different g and suggests an apparent height difference of 0.85 nm per generation as well as an increase of persistence length with g. We suggest synthetic directions to allow confrontation with theory.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2006

Surfactant assemblies and their various possible roles for the origin(s) of life.

Peter Walde

A large number of surfactants (surface active molecules) are chemically simple compounds that can be obtained by simple chemical reactions, in some cases even under presumably prebiotic conditions. Surfactant assemblies are self-organized polymolecular aggregates of surfactants, in the simplest case micelles, vesicles, hexagonal and cubic phases. It may be that these different types of surfactant assemblies have played various, so-far underestimated important roles in the processes that led to the formation of the first living systems.Although nucleic acids are key players in the formation of cells as we know them today (RNA world hypothesis), it is still unclear how RNA could have been formed under prebiotic conditions. Surfactants with their self-organizing properties may have assisted, controlled and compartimentalized some of the chemical reactions that eventually led to the formation of molecules like RNA. Therefore, surfactants were possibly very important in prebiotic times in the sense that they may have been involved in different physical and chemical processes that finally led to a transformation of non-living matter to the first cellular form(s) of life. This hypothesis is based on four main experimental observations: (i) Surfactant aggregation can lead to cell-like compartimentation (vesicles). (ii) Surfactant assemblies can provide local reaction conditions that are very different from the bulk medium, which may lead to a dramatic change in the rate of chemical reactions and to a change in reaction product distributions. (iii) The surface properties of surfactant assemblies that may be liquid- or solid-like, charged or neutral, and the elasticity and packing density of surfactant assemblies depend on the chemical structure of the surfactants, on the presence of other molecules, and on the overall environmental conditions (e. g. temperature). This wide range of surface characteristics of surfactant assemblies may allow a control of surface-bound chemical reactions not only by the charge or hydrophobicity of the surface but also by its “softness”. (iv) Chiral polymolecular assemblies (helices) may form from chiral surfactants.There are many examples that illustrate the different roles and potential roles of surfactant assemblies in different research areas outside of the field of the origin(s) of life, most importantly in investigations of contemporary living systems, in nanotechnology applications, and in the development of drug delivery systems. Concepts and ideas behind many of these applications may have relevance also in connection to the different unsolved problems in understanding the origin(s) of life.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2010

From Self-Assembled Vesicles to Protocells

Irene A. Chen; Peter Walde

Self-assembled vesicles are essential components of primitive cells. We review the importance of vesicles during the origins of life, fundamental thermodynamics and kinetics of self-assembly, and experimental models of simple vesicles, focusing on prebiotically plausible fatty acids and their derivatives. We review recent work on interactions of simple vesicles with RNA and other studies of the transition from vesicles to protocells. Finally we discuss current challenges in understanding the biophysics of protocells, as well as conceptual questions in information transmission and self-replication.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 1990

Phospholipid-Based Reverse Micelles

Peter Walde; Anna Maria Giuliani; C. Andrea Boicelli; Pier Luigi Luisi

Physicochemical investigations on the aggregation of phospholipids (mainly phosphatidylcholines) in organic solvents are reviewed and compared with the aggregation behaviour of phospholipids in aqueous medium. In particular we review the data showing that phosphatidylcholines (lecithins) form reverse micellar structures in certain apolar solvents. In these systems not only low molecular weight compounds but also catalytically active enzymes and entire cells can be solubilized. In addition, highly viscous phosphatidylcholine gels can be obtained in organic solvents upon solubilizing a critical amount of water. Generally, phospholipid-based reverse micelles can be regarded as thermodynamically stable models for inverted micellar lipid structures possibly occurring in biological membranes.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1991

Substrate Effects on the Enzymatic Activity of α-Chymotrypsin in Reverse Micelles

Qingcheng Mao; Peter Walde

Abstract Six different substrates have been used for measuring the activity of α-chymotrypsin in reverse micelles formed by sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (AOT) in isooctane. The substrates were glutaryl-Phe p-nitroanilde, succinyl-Phe p-nitroanilide, acetyl-Phe p-nitroanilide, succinyl-Ala-Ala-Phe p-nitroanilide, succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe p-nitroanilide and acetyl-Trp methyl ester. It has been shown that the dependence of the kinetic constants (kcat and Km) on the water content of the system, on wo ( = [ H 2 O] [ AOT ] ), is different for the different substrates. This indicates that activity-wo profiles for α-chymotrypsin in reverse micelles not only reflect an intrinsic feature of the enzyme alone. For the p-nitroanilides it was found that the lower kcat (and the higher Km) in aqueous solution, the higher kcat as well as Km in reverse micelles. “Superactivity” of α-chymotrypsin could only be found with the ester substrate and with relatively “poor” p-nitroanilides. The presence of a negative charge in the substrate molecule is not a prerequesite for α-chymotrypsin to show “superactivity”.


Skin Pharmacology and Physiology | 1996

Human Skin Irritation Studies of a Lecithin Microemulsion Gel and of Lecithin Liposomes

F. Dreher; Peter Walde; Pier Luigi Luisi; P. Elsner

Soybean lecithin microemulsion gels offer promising features for the possible use as matrices in transdermal therapeutic systems. In order to assess the skin irritancy potential of the gel, acute and cumulative irriation tests were performed in human subjects in vivo using as comparison an unilamellar soybean lecithin liposome preparation and the solvent isopropyl palmitate (IPP). Acute irritation was tested in 151 volunteers in a 48-hour patch test, whereas cumulative irritation was assessed in a 21-day human repeated insult patch test in 20 volunteers. In the acute irritation test, discrete irritation (erythema only) developed with the gel in 2 subjects (1.3%), with the liposomes in 3 subjects (2.0%), and with IPP in 2 subjects (1.3%). For the assessment of cumulative irritation, the IT50 (irritation time of 50% of the test population) was calculated. IT50 was 13 days for the gel, 14 days for the liposomes and 17 days for IPP. This study shows a very low acute and a low cumulative irritancy potential for the soybean lecithin microemulsion gel making it a candidate matrix for transdermal therapeutic systems also under toxicological aspects.


Nature Chemistry | 2013

Sustained gastrointestinal activity of dendronized polymer–enzyme conjugates

Gregor Fuhrmann; Andrea Grotzky; Ružica Lukić; Simon Matoori; Paola Luciani; Hao Yu; Baozhong Zhang; Peter Walde; A. Dieter Schlüter; Marc A. Gauthier; Jean-Christophe Leroux

Methods to stabilize and retain enzyme activity in the gastrointestinal tract are investigated rarely because of the difficulty of protecting proteins from an environment that has evolved to promote their digestion. Preventing the degradation of enzymes under these conditions, however, is critical for the development of new protein-based oral therapies. Here we show that covalent conjugation to polymers can stabilize orally administered therapeutic enzymes at different locations in the gastrointestinal tract. Architecturally and functionally diverse polymers are used to protect enzymes sterically from inactivation and to promote interactions with mucin on the stomach wall. Using this approach the in vivo activity of enzymes can be sustained for several hours in the stomach and/or in the small intestine. These findings provide new insight and a firm basis for the development of new therapeutic and imaging strategies based on orally administered proteins using a simple and accessible technology.

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