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Dive into the research topics where Sabine Eiben is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabine Eiben.


Advanced Materials | 2011

Virus-templated synthesis of ZnO nanostructures and formation of field-effect transistors.

Petia Atanasova; Dirk Rothenstein; Jörg J. Schneider; Rudolf C. Hoffmann; Stefan Dilfer; Sabine Eiben; Christina Wege; Holger Jeske; Joachim Bill

The search for novel methods for the synthesis of nanostructured materials is an important step towards the miniaturization of multifunctional devices, which requires careful and appropriate integration of various materials into a single unit. However, most of the conventional synthesis methods for multicomponent systems involve harsh reaction conditions and thereby introduce limitations in the choice of materials to be combined. For instance, in ceramic synthesis methods, extreme heating and/or pressure are often used, which may be inapplicable to certain components of a device structure. Further factors critical to the miniaturization are the size of the obtained powder particles and their tendency to agglomerate. Hence, the integration of different materials is still a challenging goal and can hardly be achieved by conventional processing. Biomineralization is a process used by organisms to generate composite materials composed of organic and inorganic phases, which often exhibit exceptional properties. [ 1 ] Organic molecules, such as peptides, proteins, or polysaccharides, guide the crystal growth at ambient conditions that eventually determine the morphology and the functional properties of the materials. [ 2 ] The integration of biomolecules as templates or structure-directing agents, on the other hand, offers the opportunity to explore alternative low-temperature methods in the synthesis of bioinorganic hybrid materials with novel tailored functionalities. [ 3 , 4 ] For some applications, however, the adaptation of bionic mineralization approaches to the synthesis of artifi cial composite materials is not possible, since no interactions between the inorganic phase


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2015

The Impact of Aspect Ratio on the Biodistribution and Tumor Homing of Rigid Soft-Matter Nanorods

Sourabh Shukla; Fabian J. Eber; Adithy S. Nagarajan; Nora Schmidt; Amy M. Wen; Sabine Eiben; Richard M. Twyman; Christina Wege; Nicole F. Steinmetz

The size and shape of nanocarriers can affect their fate in vivo, but little is known about the effect of nanocarrier aspect ratio on biodistribution in the setting of cancer imaging and drug delivery. The production of nanoscale anisotropic materials is a technical challenge. A unique biotemplating approach based on of rod-shaped nucleoprotein nanoparticles with predetermined aspect ratios (AR 3.5, 7, and 16.5) is used. These rigid, soft-matter nanoassemblies are derived from tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) components. The role of nanoparticle aspect ratio is investigated, while keeping the surface chemistries constant, using either PEGylated stealth nanoparticles or receptor-targeted RGD-displaying formulations. Aspect ratio has a profound impact on the behavior of the nanoparticles in vivo and in vitro. PEGylated nanorods with the lowest aspect ratio (AR 3.5) achieve the most efficient passive tumor-homing behavior because they can diffuse most easily, whereas RGD-labeled particles with a medium aspect ratio (AR 7) are more efficient at tumor targeting because this requires a balance between infusibility and ligand-receptor interactions. The in vivo behavior of nanoparticles can therefore be tailored to control biodistribution, longevity, and tumor penetration by modulating a single parameter: the aspect ratio of the nanocarrier.


ChemBioChem | 2010

Rational design of Pseudozyma antarctica lipase B yielding a general esterification catalyst.

Danni Liu; Peter Trodler; Sabine Eiben; Katja Koschorreck; Monika Müller; Jürgen Pleiss; Steffen Maurer; Cecilia Branneby; Rolf D. Schmid; Bernhard Hauer

Pseudozyma antarctica lipase B (CALB) shows activity in the acrylation of hydroxypropylcarbamate, a racemic mixture of enantiomers of primary and secondary alcohols. However, full conversion is hampered by the slowly reacting S enantiomer of the secondary alcohol. The same is true for a wide range of secondary alcohols, for example, octan‐2‐ and ‐3‐ol. In order to get high conversion in these reactions in a short time, the stereospecificity pocket of CALB was redesigned by using predictions from molecular modeling. Positions 278, 104, and 47 were targeted, and a library for two‐site saturation mutagenesis at positions 104 and 278 was constructed. The library was then screened for hydrolysis of acrylated hydroxypropylcarbamates. The best mutants L278A, L278V, L278A/W104F, and L278A/W104F/S47A showed an increased conversion in hydrolysis and transesterification of more than 30 %. While the wild‐type showed only 73 % conversion in the acrylation of hydroxypropylcarbamate after 6 h, 97 % conversion was achieved by L278A in this time. Besides this, L278A/W104F reached >96 % conversion in the acrylation of octan‐2‐ and ‐3‐ol within 48 h and showed a significant decrease in stereoselectivity, while the wild‐type reached only 68 and 59 % conversion, respectively. Thus the new biocatalysts can be used for efficient transformation of racemic alcohols and esters with high activity when the high stereoselectivity of the wild‐type hampers complete conversion of racemic substrates in a short time.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Modified TMV Particles as Beneficial Scaffolds to Present Sensor Enzymes

Claudia Koch; Katrin Wabbel; Fabian J. Eber; Peter Krolla-Sidenstein; Carlos Azucena; Hartmut Gliemann; Sabine Eiben; Fania Geiger; Christina Wege

Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is a robust nanotubular nucleoprotein scaffold increasingly employed for the high density presentation of functional molecules such as peptides, fluorescent dyes, and antibodies. We report on its use as advantageous carrier for sensor enzymes. A TMV mutant with a cysteine residue exposed on every coat protein (CP) subunit (TMVCys) enabled the coupling of bifunctional maleimide-polyethylene glycol (PEG)-biotin linkers (TMVCys/Bio). Its surface was equipped with two streptavidin [SA]-conjugated enzymes: glucose oxidase ([SA]-GOx) and horseradish peroxidase ([SA]-HRP). At least 50% of the CPs were decorated with a linker molecule, and all thereof with active enzymes. Upon use as adapter scaffolds in conventional “high-binding” microtiter plates, TMV sticks allowed the immobilization of up to 45-fold higher catalytic activities than control samples with the same input of enzymes. Moreover, they increased storage stability and reusability in relation to enzymes applied directly to microtiter plate wells. The functionalized TMV adsorbed to solid supports showed a homogeneous distribution of the conjugated enzymes and structural integrity of the nanorods upon transmission electron and atomic force microscopy. The high surface-increase and steric accessibility of the viral scaffolds in combination with the biochemical environment provided by the plant viral coat may explain the beneficial effects. TMV can, thus, serve as a favorable multivalent nanoscale platform for the ordered presentation of bioactive proteins.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2015

Peptide-equipped tobacco mosaic virus templates for selective and controllable biomineral deposition

Klara Altintoprak; Axel Seidenstücker; Alexander Welle; Sabine Eiben; Petia Atanasova; Nina Stitz; Alfred Plettl; Joachim Bill; Hartmut Gliemann; Holger Jeske; Dirk Rothenstein; Fania Geiger; Christina Wege

Summary The coating of regular-shaped, readily available nanorod biotemplates with inorganic compounds has attracted increasing interest during recent years. The goal is an effective, bioinspired fabrication of fiber-reinforced composites and robust, miniaturized technical devices. Major challenges in the synthesis of applicable mineralized nanorods lie in selectivity and adjustability of the inorganic material deposited on the biological, rod-shaped backbones, with respect to thickness and surface profile of the resulting coating, as well as the avoidance of aggregation into extended superstructures. Nanotubular tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) templates have proved particularly suitable towards this goal: Their multivalent protein coating can be modified by high-surface-density conjugation of peptides, inducing and governing silica deposition from precursor solutions in vitro. In this study, TMV has been equipped with mineralization-directing peptides designed to yield silica coatings in a reliable and predictable manner via precipitation from tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) precursors. Three peptide groups were compared regarding their influence on silica polymerization: (i) two peptide variants with alternating basic and acidic residues, i.e. lysine–aspartic acid (KD)x motifs expected to act as charge-relay systems promoting TEOS hydrolysis and silica polymerization; (ii) a tetrahistidine-exposing polypeptide (CA4H4) known to induce silicification due to the positive charge of its clustered imidazole side chains; and (iii) two peptides with high ZnO binding affinity. Differential effects on the mineralization of the TMV surface were demonstrated, where a (KD)x charge-relay peptide (designed in this study) led to the most reproducible and selective silica deposition. A homogenous coating of the biotemplate and tight control of shell thickness were achieved.


Virus Research | 2014

Tailoring the surface properties of tobacco mosaic virions by the integration of bacterially expressed mutant coat protein

Sabine Eiben; Nina Stitz; Fabian J. Eber; Jerrit Wagner; Petia Atanasova; Joachim Bill; Christina Wege; Holger Jeske

Due to its small dimensions and high stability, tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is used as nano-scaffold frequently. Its surface can be engineered to meet specific needs for technical, medical or materials applications. However, not all technically desirable TMV coat protein (CP) mutants can be propagated in plants successfully, if they change the efficiency of virion assembly. In order to circumvent this problem, a novel wild type (wt) CP-assisted and RNA-directed assembly procedure was designed for a recalcitrant CP mutant: Although pure hexahistidine-tagged CP cannot form particles on its own with TMV RNA in vitro, it was integrated into full-length particles if blended with wt CP in different proportions. The resulting rods formed dense monolayers with short range alignment on silicon substrates, substantially different from the largely wavy patterns obtained with wt TMV. Since they also mediated efficient ZnO deposition under mild conditions, the approach has yielded a new class of biotemplates which are amenable to the formation of nanostructured hybrid materials with adjustable texture for various applications.


Langmuir | 2015

Genetically improved monolayer-forming tobacco mosaic viruses to generate nanostructured semiconducting bio/inorganic hybrids.

Petia Atanasova; Nina Stitz; Shawn Sanctis; Johannes H. M. Maurer; Rudolf C. Hoffmann; Sabine Eiben; Holger Jeske; Joerg Schneider; Joachim Bill

The genetically determined design of structured functional bio/inorganic materials was investigated by applying a convective assembly approach. Wildtype tobacco mosaic virus (wt TMV) as well as several TMV mutants were organized on substrates over macroscopic-length scales. Depending on the virus type, the self-organization behavior showed pronounced differences in the surface arrangement under the same convective assembly conditions. Additionally, under varying assembly parameters, the virus particles generated structures encompassing morphologies emerging from single micrometer long fibers aligned parallel to the triple-contact line through disordered but dense films to smooth and uniform monolayers. Monolayers with diverse packing densities were used as templates to form TMV/ZnO hybrid materials. The semiconducting properties can be directly designed and tuned by the variation of the template architecture which are reflected in the transistor performance.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2012

Thiol-functionalization of acrylic ester monomers catalyzed by immobilized Humicola insolens cutinase.

Christian Kazenwadel; Sabine Eiben; Steffen Maurer; Holger Beuttler; Dennis Wetzl; Bernhard Hauer; Katja Koschorreck

Immobilized cutinase HiC from the ascomycete Humicola insolens was applied as a novel biocatalyst for the synthesis of functionalized acryclic esters by transesterification. As a model reaction, transesterification of methyl acrylate with 6-mercapto-1-hexanol at a high molar ratio in a solvent free system was chosen. Besides two minor Michael-addition by-products, 6-mercaptohexyl acrylic ester was identified as the main product with the thiol as the functional end group. Reaction conditions were optimized regarding the influence of water (0-1.72 M), temperature (22-50 °C), product inhibition and addition of the radical inhibitor butylated hydroxytoluol (BHT; 0.14-0.71 M) on conversion and by-product formation. Highest conversion of 6-mercapto-1-hexanol to 6-mercaptohexyl acrylic ester (95.4 ± 0.3%) was achieved after 6h at 40 °C in the presence of 0.025% (w/w) water without formation of by-products in a solvent free system. Applying methyl methacrylate, transesterification with 6-mercapto-1-hexanol was significantly lower (43.6 ± 0.1%) compared to transesterification of methyl acrylate with 6-mercapto-1-hexanol.


RSC Advances | 2018

Covalent incorporation of tobacco mosaic virus increases the stiffness of poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate hydrogels

Alexander Southan; T. Lang; M. Schweikert; Günter E. M. Tovar; Christina Wege; Sabine Eiben

Hydrogels are versatile materials, finding applications as adsorbers, supports for biosensors and biocatalysts or as scaffolds for tissue engineering. A frequently used building block for chemically cross-linked hydrogels is poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEG-DA). However, after curing, PEG-DA hydrogels cannot be functionalized easily. In this contribution, the stiff, rod-like tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is investigated as a functional additive to PEG-DA hydrogels. TMV consists of more than 2000 identical coat proteins and can therefore present more than 2000 functional sites per TMV available for coupling, and thus has been used as a template or building block for nano-scaled hybrid materials for many years. Here, PEG-DA (Mn = 700 g mol−1) hydrogels are combined with a thiol-group presenting TMV mutant (TMVCys). By covalent coupling of TMVCys into the hydrogel matrix via the thiol-Michael reaction, the storage modulus of the hydrogels is increased compared to pure PEG-DA hydrogels and to hydrogels containing wildtype TMV (wt-TMV) which is not coupled covalently into the hydrogel matrix. In contrast, the swelling behaviour of the hydrogels is not altered by TMVCys or wt-TMV. Transmission electron microscopy reveals that the TMV particles are well dispersed in the hydrogels without any large aggregates. These findings give rise to the conclusion that well-defined hydrogels were obtained which offer the possibility to use the incorporated TMV as multivalent carrier templates e.g. for enzymes in future studies.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Piezoelectric Templates - New Views on Biomineralization and Biomimetics.

Nina Stitz; Sabine Eiben; Petia Atanasova; Neus Domingo; Andreas Leineweber; Zaklina Burghard; Joachim Bill

Biomineralization in general is based on electrostatic interactions and molecular recognition of organic and inorganic phases. These principles of biomineralization have also been utilized and transferred to bio-inspired synthesis of functional materials during the past decades. Proteins involved in both, biomineralization and bio-inspired processes, are often piezoelectric due to their dipolar character hinting to the impact of a template’s piezoelectricity on mineralization processes. However, the piezoelectric contribution on the mineralization process and especially the interaction of organic and inorganic phases is hardly considered so far. We herein report the successful use of the intrinsic piezoelectric properties of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) to synthesize piezoelectric ZnO. Such films show a two-fold increase of the piezoelectric coefficient up to 7.2 pm V−1 compared to films synthesized on non-piezoelectric templates. By utilizing the intrinsic piezoelectricity of a biotemplate, we thus established a novel synthesis pathway towards functional materials, which sheds light on the whole field of biomimetics. The obtained results are of even broader and general interest since they are providing a new, more comprehensive insight into the mechanisms involved into biomineralization in living nature.

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Holger Jeske

University of Stuttgart

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Joachim Bill

University of Stuttgart

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Claudia Koch

University of Stuttgart

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Hartmut Gliemann

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Nina Stitz

University of Stuttgart

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