Seah Ling Kuan
University of Ulm
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Publication
Featured researches published by Seah Ling Kuan.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Yuzhou Wu; Sabyasachi Chakrabortty; Radu A. Gropeanu; Joerg Wilhelmi; Yang Xu; Kai Shih Er; Seah Ling Kuan; Kaloian Koynov; Yinthai Chan; Tanja Weil
Multifunctional peptide-polymer hybrid materials have been applied as efficient and biocompatible quantum-dot coating materials. Significant pH responsiveness (e.g., an influence of the pH on the quantum yields of the peptide-polymer/QDs) was found and is attributed to conformational rearrangements of the peptide backbone.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2013
Yuzhou Wu; Susann Ihme; Michaela Feuring-Buske; Seah Ling Kuan; Klaus Eisele; Markus Lamla; Yanran Wang; Christian Buske; Tanja Weil
The native transportation protein serum albumin represents an attractive nano-sized transporter for drug delivery applications due to its beneficial safety profile. Existing albumin-based drug delivery systems are often limited by their low drug loading capacity as well as noticeable drug leakage into the blood circulation. Therefore, a unique albumin-derived core-shell doxorubicin (DOX) delivery system based on the protein denaturing-backfolding strategy was developed. 28 DOX molecules were covalently conjugated to the albumin polypeptide backbone via an acid sensitive hydrazone linker. Polycationic and pegylated human serum albumin formed two non-toxic and enzymatically degradable protection shells around the encapsulated DOX molecules. This core-shell delivery system possesses notable advantages, including a high drug loading capacity critical for low administration doses, a two-step drug release mechanism based on pH and the presence of proteases, an attractive biocompatibility and narrow size distribution inherited from the albumin backbone, as well as fast cellular uptake and masking of epitopes due to a high degree of pegylation. The IC50 of these nanoscopic onion-type micelles was found in the low nanomolar range for Hela cells as well as leukemia cell lines. In vivo data indicate its attractive potential as anti-leukemia treatment suggesting its promising profile as nanomedicine drug delivery system.
Biomaterials Science | 2015
Yuzhou Wu; David Y. W. Ng; Seah Ling Kuan; Tanja Weil
The development of protein-polymer hybrids emerged several decades ago with the vision that their synergistic combination will offer macromolecular hybrids with manifold features to succeed as the next generation therapeutics. From the first generation of protein-polymer therapeutics represented by PEGylated proteins, the field has since advanced, reinforced by the progress in contemporary chemical techniques for designing polymeric scaffolds and protein engineering. Novel polymerization techniques that offer multifunctional strategies as well as a greater understanding of proteins and their biological behavior have both proven to be exceptional tools in the construction of these hybrid materials. In this review, we seek to summarize and highlight the recent progress in these semi-synthetic protein hybrids in terms of their preparation, design, resulting bioarchitectures and bioactivities for their intended bio-applications.
Biomacromolecules | 2013
Seah Ling Kuan; Bettina Stöckle; Jörg Reichenwallner; David Y. W. Ng; Yuzhou Wu; Mikheil Doroshenko; Kaloian Koynov; Dariush Hinderberger; Klaus Müllen; Tanja Weil
We describe the synthesis of a core-shell biohybrid consisting of a human serum albumin (HSA) core that serves as a reservoir for lipophilic molecules and a cationized shell region consisting of ethynyl-G2.0-PAMAM or ethynyl-G3.0-PAMAM dendrons. The binding capacity of lipophilic guests was quantified applying electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, and five to six out of seven pockets were still available compared with HSA. The attachment of ethynyl-G2.0-PAMAM dendrons to HSA yielded a nontoxic core-shell macromolecule that was clearly uptaken by A549 human epithelial cells due to the presence of the dendritic PAMAM shell. Significantly higher loading of doxorubicin was observed for dendronized G2-DHSA compared with the native protein due to the availability of binding pockets of the HSA core, and interaction with the dendritic shell. Dendronized G2-DHSA-doxorubicin displayed significant cytotoxicity resulting from high drug loading and high stability under different conditions, thus demonstrating its great potential as a transporter for drug molecules.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Seah Ling Kuan; David Y. W. Ng; Yuzhou Wu; Christina Förtsch; Holger Barth; Mikheil Doroshenko; Kaloian Koynov; Christoph Meier; Tanja Weil
A facile, noncovalent solid-phase immobilization platform is described to assemble Janus-like supramolecular fusion proteins that are responsive to external stimuli. A chemically postmodified transporter protein, DHSA, is fused with (imino)biotinylated cargo proteins via an avidin adaptor with a high degree of spatial control. Notably, the derived heterofusion proteins are able to cross cellular membranes, dissociate at acidic pH due to the iminobiotin linker and preserve the enzymatic activity of the cargo proteins β-galactosidase and the enzymatic subunit of Clostridium botulinum C2 toxin. The mix-and-match strategy described herein opens unique opportunities to access macromolecular architectures of high structural definition and biological activity, thus complementing protein ligation and recombinant protein expression techniques.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Tao Wang; Yuzhou Wu; Seah Ling Kuan; Oliver Dumele; Markus Lamla; David Y. W. Ng; Matthias Arzt; Jessica Thomas; Jan O. Mueller; Christopher Barner-Kowollik; Tanja Weil
A disulfide intercalator toolbox was developed for site-specific attachment of a broad variety of functional groups to proteins or peptides under mild, physiological conditions. The peptide hormone somatostatin (SST) served as model compound for intercalation into the available disulfide functionalization schemes starting from the intercalator or the reactive SST precursor before or after bioconjugation. A tetrazole-SST derivative was obtained that undergoes photoinduced cycloaddition in mammalian cells, which was monitored by live-cell imaging.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
David Y. W. Ng; Matthias Arzt; Yuzhou Wu; Seah Ling Kuan; Markus Lamla; Tanja Weil
The modulation of protein uptake and activity in response to physiological changes forms an integral part of smart protein therapeutics. We describe herein the self-assembly of a pH-responsive dendrimer shell onto the surface of active enzymes (trypsin, papain, DNase I) as a supramolecular protecting group to form a hybrid dendrimer-enzyme complex. The attachment is based on the interaction between boronic acid and salicyl hydroxamate, thus allowing the macromolecular assembly to respond to changes in pH between 5.0 and 7.4 in a highly reversible fashion. Catalytic activity is efficiently blocked in the presence of the dendrimer shell but is quantitatively restored upon shell degradation under acidic conditions. Unlike the native proteases, the hybrid constructs are shown to be efficiently taken up by A549 cells and colocalized in the acidic compartments. The programmed intracellular release of the proteases induced cytotoxicity, thereby uncovering a new avenue for precision biotherapeutics.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2013
Seah Ling Kuan; Yuzhou Wu; Tanja Weil
The synthesis of biohybrid materials with tailored functional properties represents a topic of emerging interest. Combining proteins as natural, macromolecular building blocks, and synthetic polymers opens access to giant brush-like biopolymers of high structural definition. The properties of these precision polypeptide copolymers can be tailored through various chemical modifications along their polypeptide backbone, which expands the repertoire of known protein-based materials to address biomedical applications. In this article, the synthetic strategies for the design of precision biopolymers from proteins through amino acid specific conjugation reagents are highlighted and the different functionalization strategies, their characterization, and applications are discussed.
Chemical Communications | 2006
Chwee Ying Ang; René T. Boeré; Lai Yoong Goh; Lip Lin Koh; Seah Ling Kuan; Geok Kheng Tan; Xin Yu
The title heterocyclic radicals coordinate to either 17e CpCr(CO)3 or 15e CpCr(CO)2 moieties as one-electron or as three-electron donors, respectively; in the former the bonding is via the perpendicular p orbital of the sulfur atom, while in the latter bonding is via p(pi) orbitals on both sulfur and nitrogen.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
Seah Ling Kuan; Tao Wang; Tanja Weil
Abstract The synthetic transformation of polypeptides with molecular accuracy holds great promise for providing functional and structural diversity beyond the proteome. Consequently, the last decade has seen an exponential growth of site‐directed chemistry to install additional features into peptides and proteins even inside living cells. The disulfide rebridging strategy has emerged as a powerful tool for site‐selective modifications since most proteins contain disulfide bonds. In this Review, we present the chemical design, advantages and limitations of the disulfide rebridging reagents, while summarizing their relevance for synthetic customization of functional protein bioconjugates, as well as the resultant impact and advancement for biomedical applications.