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Featured researches published by Rute André.


FEBS Journal | 2012

Bioinspired synthesis of multifunctional inorganic and bio‐organic hybrid materials

Rute André; Muhammad Nawaz Tahir; Filipe Natalio; Wolfgang Tremel

Owing to their physical and chemical properties, inorganic functional materials have tremendous impacts on key technologies such as energy generation and storage, information, medicine, and automotive engineering. Nature, on the other hand, provides evolution‐optimized processes, which lead to multifunctional inorganic–bio‐organic materials with complex structures. Their formation occurs under physiological conditions, and is goverened by a combination of highly regulated biological processes and intrinsic chemical properties. Nevertheless, insights into the molecular mechanisms of biomineralization open up promising perspectives for bioinspired and biomimetic design and the development of inorganic–bio‐organic multifunctional hybrids. Therefore, biomimetic approaches may disclose new synthetic routes under ambient conditions by integrating the concept of gene‐regulated biomineralization principles. The skeletal structures of marine sponges provide an interesting example of biosilicification via enzymatically controlled and gene‐regulated silica metabolism. Spicule formation is initiated intracellularly by a fine‐tuned genetic mechanism, which involves silica deposition in vesicles (silicassomes) under the control of the enzyme silicatein, which has both catalytic and templating functions. In this review, we place an emphasis on the fabrication of biologically inspired materials with silicatein as a biocatalyst.


Chemical Communications | 2013

Silicatein conjugation inside nanoconfined geometries through immobilized NTA-Ni(II) chelates.

Muhammad Nawaz Tahir; Mubarak Ali; Rute André; Werner E. G. Müller; Heinz-Christoph Schröder; Wolfgang Tremel; Wolfgang Ensinger

The chemical modification and bioconjugation processes inside confined geometries by His-tagged silicatein promote sensitive changes in the polarity and surface charge density that mainly contribute to the ionic current rectification properties of the single conical nanopores.


Nanoscale | 2013

Self-cleaning antimicrobial surfaces by bio-enabled growth of SnO2 coatings on glass

Rute André; Filipe Natalio; Muhammad Nawaz Tahir; Rüdiger Berger; Wolfgang Tremel

Conventional vapor-deposition techniques for coatings require sophisticated equipment and/or high-temperature resistant substrates. Therefore bio-inspired techniques for the fabrication of inorganic coatings have been developed in recent years. Inspired by the biology behind the formation of the intricate skeletons of diatoms orchestrated by a class of cationic polyamines (silaffins) we have used surface-bound spermine, a naturally occurring polyamine, to promote the fast deposition of homogeneous, thin and transparent biomimetic SnO2 coatings on glass surfaces. The bio-enabled SnO2 film is highly photoactive, i.e. it generates superoxide radicals (O2˙(-)) upon sunlight exposure resulting in a strong degradation of organic contaminants and a strong antimicrobial activity. Upon illumination the biomimetic SnO2 coating exhibits a switchable amphiphilic behavior, which - in combination with its photoactivity - creates a self-cleaning surface. The intrinsic self-cleaning properties could lead to the development of new protective, antifouling coatings on various substrates.


Langmuir | 2011

Chemical mimicry: hierarchical 1D TiO2@ZrO2 core-shell structures reminiscent of sponge spicules by the synergistic effect of silicatein-α and silintaphin-1.

Rute André; Muhammad Nawaz Tahir; Thorben Link; Florian D. Jochum; Ute Kolb; Patrick Theato; Rüdiger Berger; Matthias Wiens; Heinz-Christoph Schröder; Werner E. G. Müller; Wolfgang Tremel

In nature, mineralization of hard tissues occurs due to the synergistic effect of components present in the organic matrix of these tissues, with templating and catalytic effects. In Suberites domuncula, a well-studied example of the class of demosponges, silica formation is mediated and templated by an axial proteinaceous filament with silicatein-α, one of the main components. But so far, the effect of other organic constituents from the proteinaceous filament on the catalytic effect of silicatein-α has not been studied in detail. Here we describe the synthesis of core-shell TiO(2)@SiO(2) and TiO(2)@ZrO(2) nanofibers via grafting of silicatein-α onto a TiO(2) nanowire backbone followed by a coassembly of silintaphin-1 through its specifically interacting domains. We show for the first time a linker-free, one-step funtionalization of metal oxides with silicatein-α using glutamate tag. In the presence of silintaphin-1 silicatein-α facilitates the formation of a dense layer of SiO(2) or ZrO(2) on the TiO(2)@protein backbone template. The immobilization of silicatein-α onto TiO(2) probes was characterized by atomic force microscopy (AFM), optical light microscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). The coassembly of silicatein-α and silintaphin-1 may contribute to biomimetic approaches that pursue a controlled formation of patterned biosilica-based biomaterials.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011

V(2)O(5) nanowires with an intrinsic iodination activity leading to the formation of self-assembled melanin-like biopolymers

Filipe Natalio; Rute André; Sascha A. Pihan; Madalena Humanes; Ron Wever; Wolfgang Tremel

V2O5 nanowires act as biomimetic catalysts resembling vanadium haloperoxidases (V-HPO). The nanowires display iodinating activity as confirmed by a colorimetric assay using thymol blue (TB), UV/Vis spectrophotometry and mass spectrometry (FD-MS). In the presence of dopamine these nanowires catalyze the fast and efficient synthesis of melanin-like biopolymers under mild conditions (aqueous solution, neutral pH and room temperature). The resulting melanin-like biopolymer obtained by the V2O5 nanowire catalysts was characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction, UV-Vis, FT-IR and electric conductivity resembling the natural biopolymer both in its chemical and morphological features. In addition, this synthetic biopolymer self-assembles into fibril-like structures by forming stacks due to π interactions between the aromatic rings.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Haloperoxidase Mimicry by CeO2−x Nanorods Combats Biofouling

Karoline Herget; Patrick Hubach; Stefan Pusch; Peter Deglmann; Hermann Götz; Tatiana Gorelik; Il'ya A. Gural'skiy; Felix Pfitzner; Thorben Link; Stephan Schenk; Martin Panthöfer; Vadim Ksenofontov; Ute Kolb; Till Opatz; Rute André; Wolfgang Tremel

CeO2-x nanorods are functional mimics of natural haloperoxidases. They catalyze the oxidative bromination of phenol red to bromophenol blue and of natural signaling molecules involved in bacterial quorum sensing. Laboratory and field tests with paint formulations containing 2 wt% of CeO2-x nanorods show a reduction in biofouling comparable to Cu2 O, the most typical biocidal pigment.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2011

V2O5 nanowires with an intrinsic peroxidase-like activity

Rute André; Filipe Natalio; Madalena Humanes; Jana Leppin; Katja Heinze; Ron Wever; Heinz-Christoph Schröder; Werner E. G. Müller; Wolfgang Tremel


Nature Nanotechnology | 2012

Vanadium pentoxide nanoparticles mimic vanadium haloperoxidases and thwart biofilm formation

Filipe Natalio; Rute André; Aloysius F. Hartog; Brigitte Stoll; Klaus Peter Jochum; Ron Wever; Wolfgang Tremel


Nanoscale | 2011

Hydrogen peroxide sensors for cellular imaging based on horse radish peroxidase reconstituted on polymer-functionalized TiO2 nanorods

Muhammad Nawaz Tahir; Rute André; Jugal Kishore Sahoo; Florian D. Jochum; Patrick Theato; Filipe Natalio; Rüdiger Berger; Robert Branscheid; Ute Kolb; Wolfgang Tremel


Chemistry of Materials | 2011

Enzymatic Synthesis and Surface Deposition of Tin Dioxide using Silicatein-α

Rute André; Muhammed Nawaz Tahir; Heinz C. Schröder; Werner E. G. Müller; Wolfgang Tremel

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Muhammad Nawaz Tahir

King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

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