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Featured researches published by Pieter-Jan De Temmerman.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2014

Genotoxicity evaluation of nanosized titanium dioxide, synthetic amorphous silica and multi-walled carbon nanotubes in human lymphocytes

Ana Tavares; Henriqueta Louro; Susana Antunes; Stéphanie Quarré; Sophie Simar; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Eveline Verleysen; Jan Mast; Keld Alstrup Jensen; Hannu Norppa; Fabrice Nesslany; Maria João Silva

Toxicological characterization of manufactured nanomaterials (NMs) is essential for safety assessment, while keeping pace with innovation from their development and application in consumer products. The specific physicochemical properties of NMs, including size and morphology, might influence their toxicity and have impact on human health. The present work aimed to evaluate the genotoxicity of nanosized titanium dioxide (TiO2), synthetic amorphous silica (SAS) and multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs), in human lymphocytes. The morphology and size of those NMs were characterized by transmission electron microscopy, while the hydrodynamic particle size-distributions were determined by dynamic light scattering. Using a standardized procedure to ensure the dispersion of the NMs and the cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay (without metabolic activation), we observed significant increases in the frequencies of micronucleated binucleated cells (MNBCs) for some TiO2 NMs and for two MWCNTs, although no clear dose-response relationships could be disclosed. In contrast, all forms of SAS analyzed in this study were unable to induce micronuclei. The present findings increase the weight of evidence towards a genotoxic effect of some forms of TiO2 and some MWCNTs. Regarding safety assessment, the differential genotoxicity observed for closely related NMs highlights the importance of investigating the toxic potential of each NM individually, instead of assuming a common mechanism and equal genotoxic effects for a set of similar NMs.


Reproductive Toxicology | 2013

Effects of lung exposure to carbon nanotubes on female fertility and pregnancy. A study in mice

Karin Sørig Hougaard; Petra Jackson; Zdenka O. Kyjovska; Renie K. Birkedal; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Andrea Brunelli; Eveline Verleysen; Anne Mette Madsen; Anne T. Saber; Giulio Pojana; Jan Mast; Antonio Marcomini; Keld Alstrup Jensen; Håkan Wallin; Józef Szarek; Alicja Mortensen; Ulla Vogel

We studied the effects of preconceptional exposure to multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs): mature, female C57BL/6J mice were intratracheally instilled with 67μg NM-400 MWCNT, and the following day co-housed with mature males, in breeding pairs. Time to delivery of the first litter, litter parameters, maternal inflammation and histopathology of lung and liver were recorded. In male offspring, locomotor activity, startle response, and daily sperm production (DSP) were assessed. In the dams, lung and liver bore evidence of MWCNT exposure when assessed 6 weeks and 4 months after exposure. A short delay in the delivery of the first litter was observed in exposed females. Litter parameters, behavior and DSP were similar in control and exposed groups. In conclusion, instillation of a single dose of MWCNT induced long lasting pathological changes in dam lung and liver. Theoretically, lung inflammation due to particle exposure could interfere with female reproductive parameters. Whether the observed lag in delivery of a first litter was in fact caused by exposure to MWCNT should be addressed in a study designed specifically to elucidate effects on the early processes involved in establishment of pregnancy. Exposure was not associated with changes in the assessed gestational or offspring parameters.


Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2012

Quantitative characterization of agglomerates and aggregates of pyrogenic and precipitated amorphous silica nanomaterials by transmission electron microscopy

Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Elke Van Doren; Eveline Verleysen; Yves Van der Stede; Michel Abi Daoud Francisco; Jan Mast

BackgroundThe interaction of a nanomaterial (NM) with a biological system depends not only on the size of its primary particles but also on the size, shape and surface topology of its aggregates and agglomerates. A method based on transmission electron microscopy (TEM), to visualize the NM and on image analysis, to measure detected features quantitatively, was assessed for its capacity to characterize the aggregates and agglomerates of precipitated and pyrogenic synthetic amorphous silicon dioxide (SAS), or silica, NM.ResultsBright field (BF) TEM combined with systematic random imaging and semi-automatic image analysis allows measuring the properties of SAS NM quantitatively. Automation allows measuring multiple and arithmetically complex parameters simultaneously on high numbers of detected particles. This reduces operator-induced bias and assures a statistically relevant number of measurements, avoiding the tedious repetitive task of manual measurements. Access to multiple parameters further allows selecting the optimal parameter in function of a specific purpose.Using principle component analysis (PCA), twenty-three measured parameters were classified into three classes containing measures for size, shape and surface topology of the NM.ConclusionThe presented method allows a detailed quantitative characterization of NM, like dispersions of precipitated and pyrogenic SAS based on the number-based distributions of their mean diameter, sphericity and shape factor.


Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2011

Determination of the volume-specific surface area by using transmission electron tomography for characterization and definition of nanomaterials.

Elke Van Doren; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Michel Abi Daoud Francisco; Jan Mast

BackgroundTransmission electron microscopy (TEM) remains an important technique to investigate the size, shape and surface characteristics of particles at the nanometer scale. Resulting micrographs are two dimensional projections of objects and their interpretation can be difficult. Recently, electron tomography (ET) is increasingly used to reveal the morphology of nanomaterials (NM) in 3D. In this study, we examined the feasibility to visualize and measure silica and gold NM in suspension using conventional bright field electron tomography.ResultsThe general morphology of gold and silica NM was visualized in 3D by conventional TEM in bright field mode. In orthoslices of the examined NM the surface features of a NM could be seen and measured without interference of higher or lower lying structures inherent to conventional TEM. Segmentation by isosurface rendering allowed visualizing the 3D information of an electron tomographic reconstruction in greater detail than digital slicing. From the 3D reconstructions, the surface area and the volume of the examined NM could be estimated directly and the volume-specific surface area (VSSA) was calculated. The mean VSSA of all examined NM was significantly larger than the threshold of 60 m2/cm3.The high correlation between the measured values of area and volume gold nanoparticles with a known spherical morphology and the areas and volumes calculated from the equivalent circle diameter (ECD) of projected nanoparticles (NP) indicates that the values measured from electron tomographic reconstructions are valid for these gold particles.ConclusionThe characterization and definition of the examined gold and silica NM can benefit from application of conventional bright field electron tomography: the NM can be visualized in 3D, while surface features and the VSSA can be measured.


Science Advances | 2015

Engineering a nanopore with co-chaperonin function

Ching-Wen Ho; Veerle Van Meervelt; Keng-Chang Tsai; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Jan Mast; Giovanni Maglia

A recombinant GroES nanopore reveals the dynamics and kinetics of the allosteric intermediates of the GroEL protein-folding reaction. The emergence of an enzymatic function can reveal functional insights and allows the engineering of biological systems with enhanced properties. We engineered an alpha hemolysin nanopore to function as GroES, a protein that, in complex with GroEL, forms a two-stroke protein-folding nanomachine. The transmembrane co-chaperonin was prepared by recombination of GroES functional elements with the nanopore, suggesting that emergent functions in molecular machines can be added bottom-up by incorporating modular elements into preexisting protein scaffolds. The binding of a single-ring version of GroEL to individual GroES nanopores prompted large changes to the unitary nanopore current, most likely reflecting the allosteric transitions of the chaperonin apical domains. One of the GroEL-induced current levels showed fast fluctuations (<1 ms), a characteristic that might be instrumental for efficient substrate encapsulation or folding. In the presence of unfolded proteins, the pattern of current transitions changed, suggesting a possible mechanism in which the free energy of adenosine triphosphate binding and hydrolysis is expended only when substrate proteins are occupied.


Archive | 2015

Physical Characterization of Nanomaterials in Dispersion by Transmission Electron Microscopy in a Regulatory Framework

Jan Mast; Eveline Verleysen; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman

TEM is one of the few techniques that can identify nanoparticles according to the current definitions. This chapter focuses on the different steps required to analyze dispersed nanomaterials by TEM. Methodologies to obtain homogeneous and stable dispersions of colloidal nanomaterials and powders are presented. The preparation of TEM specimens to obtain a representative distribution of particles on the grid is discussed. The application of TEM imaging methods, electron diffraction, and analytical TEM to obtain complementary information on the size, morphology, crystallographic structure, electronic structure, and composition of nanomaterials is reviewed.


Powder Technology | 2014

Semi-automatic size measurement of primary particles in aggregated nanomaterials by transmission electron microscopy

Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Eveline Verleysen; Jeroen Lammertyn; Jan Mast


Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2014

Measurement uncertainties of size, shape, and surface measurements using transmission electron microscopy of near-monodisperse, near-spherical nanoparticles

Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Jeroen Lammertyn; Bart De Ketelaere; Vikram Kestens; Gert Roebben; Eveline Verleysen; Jan Mast


Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2016

Challenges in the size analysis of a silica nanoparticle mixture as candidate certified reference material

Vikram Kestens; Gert Roebben; Jan Herrmann; Åsa K. Jämting; Victoria A. Coleman; Caterina Minelli; Charles A. Clifford; Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Jan Mast; Liu Junjie; Frank Babick; Helmut Cölfen; Hendrik Emons


Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2014

Size measurement uncertainties of near-monodisperse, near-spherical nanoparticles using transmission electron microscopy and particle-tracking analysis

Pieter-Jan De Temmerman; Eveline Verleysen; Jeroen Lammertyn; Jan Mast

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Jeroen Lammertyn

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Victoria A. Coleman

National Measurement Institute

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Keld Alstrup Jensen

National Institute of Occupational Health

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Bart De Ketelaere

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Ching-Wen Ho

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Veerle Van Meervelt

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Gert Roebben

Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements

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Vikram Kestens

Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements

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