Rodrigo Madurga
Technical University of Madrid
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rodrigo Madurga.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2016
Laura Fernández-García; Núria Marí-Buyé; Juan A. Barios; Rodrigo Madurga; Manuel Elices; José Pérez-Rigueiro; Milagros Ramos; Gustavo V. Guinea; Daniel González-Nieto
At present, effective therapies to repair the central nervous system do not exist. Biomaterials might represent a new frontier for the development of neurorestorative therapies after brain injury and degeneration. In this study, an in situ gelling silk fibroin hydrogel was developed via the sonication-induced gelation of regenerated silk fibroin solutions. An adequate timeframe for the integration of the biomaterial into the brain tissue was obtained by controlling the intensity and time of sonication. After the intrastriatal injection of silk fibroin the inflammation and cell death in the implantation area were transient. We did not detect considerable cognitive or sensorimotor deficits, either as examined by different behavioral tests or an electrophysiological analysis. The sleep and wakefulness states studied by chronic electroencephalogram recordings and the fitness of thalamocortical projections and the somatosensory cortex explored by evoked potentials were in the range of normality. The methodology used in this study might serve to assess the biological safety of other biomaterials implanted into the rodent brain. Our study highlights the biocompatibility of native silk with brain tissue and extends the current dogma of the innocuousness of this biomaterial for therapeutic applications, which has repercussion in regenerative neuroscience. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE The increasingly use of sophisticated biomaterials to encapsulate stem cells has changed the comprehensive overview of potential strategies for repairing the nervous system. Silk fibroin (SF) meets with most of the standards of a biomaterial suitable to enhance stem cell survival and function. However, a proof-of-principle of the in vivo safety and tolerability of SF implanted into the brain tissue is needed. In this study we have examined the tissue bioresponse and brain function after implantation of SF hydrogels. We have demonstrated the benign coexistence of silk with the complex neuronal circuitry that governs sensorimotor coordination and mechanisms such as learning and memory. Our results have repercussion in the development of advances strategies using this biomaterial in regenerative neuroscience.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Rodrigo Madurga; Todd A. Blackledge; B. Perea; Gustavo R. Plaza; C. Riekel; Manfred Burghammer; Manuel Elices; Gustavo V. Guinea; José Pérez-Rigueiro
The extraordinary mechanical performance of spider dragline silk is explained by its highly ordered microstructure and results from the sequences of its constituent proteins. This optimized microstructural organization simultaneously achieves high tensile strength and strain at breaking by taking advantage of weak molecular interactions. However, elucidating how the original design evolved over the 400 million year history of spider silk, and identifying the basic relationships between microstructural details and performance have proven difficult tasks. Here we show that the analysis of maximum supercontracted single spider silk fibers using X ray diffraction shows a complex picture of silk evolution where some key microstructural features are conserved phylogenetically while others show substantial variation even among closely related species. This new understanding helps elucidate which microstructural features need to be copied in order to produce the next generation of biomimetic silk fibers.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Rodrigo Madurga; Gustavo R. Plaza; Todd A. Blackledge; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; José Pérez-Rigueiro
Spider major ampullate gland silks (MAS) vary greatly in material properties among species but, this variation is shown here to be confined to evolutionary shifts along a single universal performance trajectory. This reveals an underlying design principle that is maintained across large changes in both spider ecology and silk chemistry. Persistence of this design principle becomes apparent after the material properties are defined relative to the true alignment parameter, which describes the orientation and stretching of the protein chains in the silk fiber. Our results show that the mechanical behavior of all Entelegynae major ampullate silk fibers, under any conditions, are described by this single parameter that connects the sequential action of three deformation micromechanisms during stretching: stressing of protein-protein hydrogen bonds, rotation of the β-nanocrystals and growth of the ordered fraction. Conservation of these traits for over 230 million years is an indication of the optimal design of the material and gives valuable clues for the production of biomimetic counterparts based on major ampullate spider silk.
Scientific Reports | 2013
G. B. Perea; C. Riekel; Gustavo V. Guinea; Rodrigo Madurga; Rafael Daza; Manfred Burghammer; C. Hayashi; Manuel Elices; Gustavo R. Plaza; José Pérez-Rigueiro
Spider silks combine a significant number of desirable characteristics in one material, including large tensile strength and strain at breaking, biocompatibility, and the possibility of tailoring their properties. Major ampullate gland silk (MAS) is the most studied silk and their properties are explained by a double lattice of hydrogen bonds and elastomeric protein chains linked to polyalanine β-nanocrystals. However, many basic details regarding the relationship between composition, microstructure and properties in silks are still lacking. Here we show that this relationship can be traced in flagelliform silk (Flag) spun by Argiope trifasciata spiders after identifying a phase consisting of polyglycine II nanocrystals. The presence of this phase is consistent with the dominant presence of the –GGX– and –GPG– motifs in its sequence. In contrast to the passive role assigned to polyalanine nanocrystals in MAS, polyglycine II nanocrystals can undergo growing/collapse processes that contribute to increase toughness and justify the ability of Flag to supercontract.
Biomacromolecules | 2017
Rodrigo Madurga; Alfonso M. Ganan-Calvo; Gustavo R. Plaza; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; José Pérez-Rigueiro
In the last years, there has been an increasing interest in bioinspired approaches for different applications, including the spinning of high performance silk fibers. Bioinspired spinning is based on the natural spinning system of spiders and worms and requires combining changes in the chemical environment of the proteins with the application of mechanical stresses. Here we present the novel straining flow spinning (SFS) process and prove its ability to produce high performance fibers under mild, environmentally friendly conditions, from aqueous protein dopes. SFS is shown to be an extremely versatile technique which allows controlling a large number of processing parameters. This ample set of parameters allows fine-tuning the microstructure and mechanical behavior of the fibers, which opens the possibility of adapting the fibers to their intended uses.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Ping Jiang; Núria Marí-Buyé; Rodrigo Madurga; María Arroyo-Hernández; Concepción Solanas; Alfonso Gañán; Rafael Daza; Gustavo R. Plaza; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; José Luis Cenis; José Pérez-Rigueiro
Spider silk fibers were produced through an alternative processing route that differs widely from natural spinning. The process follows a procedure traditionally used to obtain fibers directly from the glands of silkworms and requires exposure to an acid environment and subsequent stretching. The microstructure and mechanical behavior of the so-called spider silk gut fibers can be tailored to concur with those observed in naturally spun spider silk, except for effects related with the much larger cross-sectional area of the former. In particular spider silk gut has a proper ground state to which the material can revert independently from its previous loading history by supercontraction. A larger cross-sectional area implies that spider silk gut outperforms the natural material in terms of the loads that the fiber can sustain. This property suggests that it could substitute conventional spider silk fibers in some intended uses, such as sutures and scaffolds in tissue engineering.
Green Chemistry | 2017
Rodrigo Madurga; Alfonso M. Ganan-Calvo; Gustavo R. Plaza; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; José Pérez-Rigueiro
In the last few decades there has been increasing interest in the spinning of regenerated silk fibers. Although this research started with the use of harsh chemicals to dissolve and then coagulate silk proteins, it has shifted to biomimetic approaches that allow the use of environmentally friendly chemistries. This shift is not surprising since silk fibers in Nature are spun under extremely mild conditions. In this work we use a biomimetic spinning process called straining flow spinning to spin regenerated silkworm silk fibers. Our results show that straining flow spinning is a versatile technique that allows the spinning of silk fibers using different coagulating systems and provides the possibility of developing an industrially scalable and environmentally friendly spinning process.
Biomimetics | 2018
José Pérez-Rigueiro; Rodrigo Madurga; Alfonso M. Ganan-Calvo; Gustavo R. Plaza; Manuel Elices; Patricia A. López; Rafael Daza; Daniel González-Nieto; Gustavo V. Guinea
This work summarizes the main principles and some of the most significant results of straining flow spinning (SFS), a technology developed originally by the authors of this work. The principles on which the technology is based, inspired by the natural spinning system of silkworms and spiders, are presented, as well as some of the main achievements of the technique. Among these achievements, spinning under environmentally friendly conditions, obtaining high-performance fibers, and imparting the fibers with emerging properties such as supercontraction are discussed. Consequently, SFS appears as an efficient process that may represent one of the first realizations of a biomimetic technology with a significant impact at the production level.
European Polymer Journal | 2016
Gracia Belén Perea; Concepción Solanas; Núria Marí-Buyé; Rodrigo Madurga; F. Agulló-Rueda; Alfonso Muinelo; Christian Riekel; Manfred Burghammer; Inmaculada Jorge; Jesús Vázquez; Gustavo R. Plaza; Adriana L. Torres; Francisco del Pozo; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; José Luis Cenis; José Pérez-Rigueiro
Soft Matter | 2015
José Luis Cenis; Rodrigo Madurga; Salvador Aznar-Cervantes; A. Abel Lozano-Pérez; Núria Marí-Buyé; Luis Meseguer-Olmo; Gustavo R. Plaza; Gustavo V. Guinea; Manuel Elices; Francisco del Pozo; José Pérez-Rigueiro