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Dive into the research topics where Rubul Mout is active.

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Featured researches published by Rubul Mout.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2012

Surface functionalization of nanoparticles for nanomedicine

Rubul Mout; Daniel F. Moyano; Subinoy Rana; Vincent M. Rotello

Control of interactions between nanoparticles and biosystems is essential for the effective utilization of these materials in biomedicine. A wide variety of nanoparticle surface structures have been developed for imaging, sensing, and delivery applications. In this research Highlight, we will emphasize advances in tailoring nanoparticle interfaces for implementation in nanomedicine.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2012

Monolayer coated gold nanoparticles for delivery applications

Subinoy Rana; Avinash Bajaj; Rubul Mout; Vincent M. Rotello

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) provide attractive vehicles for delivery of drugs, genetic materials, proteins, and small molecules. AuNPs feature low core toxicity coupled with the ability to parametrically control particle size and surface properties. In this review, we focus on engineering of the AuNP surface monolayer, highlighting recent advances in tuning monolayer structures for efficient delivery of drugs and biomolecules. This review covers two broad categories of particle functionalization, organic monolayers and biomolecule coatings, and discusses their applications in drug, DNA/RNA, protein and small molecule delivery.


ACS Nano | 2013

Direct delivery of functional proteins and enzymes to the cytosol using nanoparticle-stabilized nanocapsules.

Rui Tang; Chang Soo Kim; David J. Solfiell; Subinoy Rana; Rubul Mout; Elih M. Velázquez-Delgado; Apiwat Chompoosor; Youngdo Jeong; Bo Yan; Zheng-Jiang Zhu; Chaekyu Kim; Jeanne A. Hardy; Vincent M. Rotello

Intracellular protein delivery is an important tool for both therapeutic and fundamental applications. Effective protein delivery faces two major challenges: efficient cellular uptake and avoiding endosomal sequestration. We report here a general strategy for direct delivery of functional proteins to the cytosol using nanoparticle-stabilized capsules (NPSCs). These NPSCs are formed and stabilized through supramolecular interactions between the nanoparticle, the protein cargo, and the fatty acid capsule interior. The NPSCs are ~130 nm in diameter and feature low toxicity and excellent stability in serum. The effectiveness of these NPSCs as therapeutic protein carriers was demonstrated through the delivery of fully functional caspase-3 to HeLa cells with concomitant apoptosis. Analogous delivery of green fluorescent protein (GFP) confirmed cytosolic delivery as well as intracellular targeting of the delivered protein, demonstrating the utility of the system for both therapeutic and imaging applications.


ACS Nano | 2016

Regulation of Macrophage Recognition through the Interplay of Nanoparticle Surface Functionality and Protein Corona

Krishnendu Saha; Mehran Rahimi; Mahdieh Yazdani; Sung Tae Kim; Daniel F. Moyano; Singyuk Hou; Ridhha Das; Rubul Mout; Farhad Rezaee; Morteza Mahmoudi; Vincent M. Rotello

Using a family of cationic gold nanoparticles (NPs) with similar size and charge, we demonstrate that proper surface engineering can control the nature and identity of protein corona in physiological serum conditions. The protein coronas were highly dependent on the hydrophobicity and arrangement of chemical motifs on NP surface. The NPs were uptaken in macrophages in a corona-dependent manner, predominantly through recognition of specific complement proteins in the NP corona. Taken together, this study shows that surface functionality can be used to tune the protein corona formed on NP surface, dictating the interaction of NPs with macrophages.


ACS Nano | 2017

Direct Cytosolic Delivery of CRISPR/Cas9-Ribonucleoprotein for Efficient Gene Editing

Rubul Mout; Moumita Ray; Gulen Yesilbag Tonga; Yi-Wei Lee; Tristan Tay; Kanae Sasaki; Vincent M. Rotello

Genome editing through the delivery of CRISPR/Cas9-ribonucleoprotein (Cas9-RNP) reduces unwanted gene targeting and avoids integrational mutagenesis that can occur through gene delivery strategies. Direct and efficient delivery of Cas9-RNP into the cytosol followed by translocation to the nucleus remains a challenge. Here, we report a remarkably highly efficient (∼90%) direct cytoplasmic/nuclear delivery of Cas9 protein complexed with a guide RNA (sgRNA) through the coengineering of Cas9 protein and carrier nanoparticles. This construct provides effective (∼30%) gene editing efficiency and opens up opportunities in studying genome dynamics.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Direct Cytosolic Delivery of siRNA Using Nanoparticle‐Stabilized Nanocapsules

Ying Jiang; Rui Tang; Bradley Duncan; Ziwen Jiang; Bo Yan; Rubul Mout; Vincent M. Rotello

The use of nanoparticle-stabilized nanocapsules (NPSCs) for the direct cytosolic delivery of siRNA is reported. In this approach, siRNA is complexed with cationic arginine-functionalized gold nanoparticles by electrostatic interactions, with the resulting ensemble self-assembled onto the surface of fatty acid nanodroplets to form a NPSC/siRNA nanocomplex. The complex rapidly delivers siRNA into the cytosol through membrane fusion, a mechanism supported by cellular uptake studies. Using destabilized green fluorescent protein (deGFP) as a target, 90% knockdown was observed in HEK293 cells. Moreover, the delivery of siRNA targeting polo-like kinase 1 (siPLK1) efficiently silenced PLK1 expression in cancer cells with concomitant cytotoxicity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Ratiometric Array of Conjugated Polymers-Fluorescent Protein Provides a Robust Mammalian Cell Sensor.

Subinoy Rana; S. Gokhan Elci; Rubul Mout; Arvind K. Singla; Mahdieh Yazdani; Markus Bender; Avinash Bajaj; Krishnendu Saha; Uwe H. F. Bunz; Frank R. Jirik; Vincent M. Rotello

Supramolecular complexes of a family of positively charged conjugated polymers (CPs) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) create a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based ratiometric biosensor array. Selective multivalent interactions of the CPs with mammalian cell surfaces caused differential change in FRET signals, providing a fingerprint signature for each cell type. The resulting fluorescence signatures allowed the identification of 16 different cell types and discrimination between healthy, cancerous, and metastatic cells, with the same genetic background. While the CP-GFP sensor array completely differentiated between the cell types, only partial classification was achieved for the CPs alone, validating the effectiveness of the ratiometric sensor. The utility of the biosensor was further demonstrated in the detection of blinded unknown samples, where 121 of 128 samples were correctly identified. Notably, this selectivity-based sensor stratified diverse cell types in minutes, using only 2000 cells, without requiring specific biomarkers or cell labeling.


ACS Nano | 2014

Rapid Identification of Bacterial Biofilms and Biofilm Wound Models Using a Multichannel Nanosensor

Xiaoning Li; Hao Kong; Rubul Mout; Krishnendu Saha; Daniel F. Moyano; Sandra M. Robinson; Subinoy Rana; Xinrong Zhang; Margaret A. Riley; Vincent M. Rotello

Identification of infectious bacteria responsible for biofilm-associated infections is challenging due to the complex and heterogeneous biofilm matrix. To address this issue and minimize the impact of heterogeneity on biofilm identification, we developed a gold nanoparticle (AuNP)-based multichannel sensor to detect and identify biofilms based on their physicochemical properties. Our results showed that the sensor can discriminate six bacterial biofilms including two composed of uropathogenic bacteria. The capability of the sensor was further demonstrated through discrimination of biofilms in a mixed bacteria/mammalian cell in vitro wound model.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2015

Co-delivery of protein and small molecule therapeutics using nanoparticle-stabilized nanocapsules.

Chang Soo Kim; Rubul Mout; Yunlong Zhao; Yi-Cheun Yeh; Rui Tang; Youngdo Jeong; Bradley Duncan; Jeanne A. Hardy; Vincent M. Rotello

Combination therapy employing proteins and small molecules provides access to synergistic treatment strategies. Co-delivery of these two payloads is challenging due to the divergent physicochemical properties of small molecule and protein cargos. Nanoparticle-stabilized nanocapsules (NPSCs) are promising for combination treatment strategies since they have the potential to deliver small molecule drugs and proteins simultaneously into the cytosol. In this study, we loaded paclitaxel into the hydrophobic core of the NPSC and self-assembled caspase-3 and nanoparticles on the capsule surface. The resulting combination NPSCs showed higher cytotoxicity than either of the single agent NPSCs, with synergistic action established using combination index values.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Fabrication of Multiresponsive Bioactive Nanocapsules through Orthogonal Self‐Assembly

Yi-Cheun Yeh; Rui Tang; Rubul Mout; Youngdo Jeong; Vincent M. Rotello

Multifunctional self-assembled systems present platforms for fundamental research and practical applications as they provide tunability of structure, functionality, and stimuli responsiveness. Pragmatic structures for biological applications have multiple design requirements, including control of size, stability, and environmental response. Here we present the fabrication of multifunctional nanoparticle-stabilized capsules (NPSCs) by using a set of orthogonal supramolecular interactions. In these capsules, fluorescent proteins are attached to quantum dots through polyhistidine coordination. These anionic assemblies interact laterally with cationic gold nanoparticles that are anchored to the fatty acid core through guanidinium-carboxylate interactions. The lipophilic core then provides a reservoir for hydrophobic endosome-disrupting agents, thereby generating a system featuring stimuli-responsive release of a payload into the cytosol with fluorescence monitoring.

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Vincent M. Rotello

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Gulen Yesilbag Tonga

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Subinoy Rana

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Krishnendu Saha

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Yi-Cheun Yeh

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Moumita Ray

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Bo Yan

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Daniel F. Moyano

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Bradley Duncan

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Ngoc D. B. Le

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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