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Dive into the research topics where Simone Mosca is active.

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Featured researches published by Simone Mosca.


Biomacromolecules | 2013

Magnetic Porous Sugar-Functionalized PEG Microgels for Efficient Isolation and Removal of Bacteria from Solution

Muriel Behra; Nahid Azzouz; Stephan Schmidt; Dmitry V. Volodkin; Simone Mosca; Munish Chanana; Peter H. Seeberger; Laura Hartmann

Here, we present a new microparticle system for the selective detection and magnetic removal of bacteria from contaminated solutions. The novelty of this system lies in the combination of a biocompatible scaffold reducing unspecific interactions with high capacity for bacteria binding. We apply highly porous poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) microparticles and functionalize them, introducing both sugar ligands for specific bacteria targeting and cationic moieties for electrostatic loading of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles. The resulting magnetic, porous, sugar-functionalized (MaPoS) PEG microgels are able to selectively bind and discriminate between different strains of bacteria Escherichia coli . Furthermore, they allow for a highly efficient removal of bacteria from solution as their increased surface area can bind three times more bacteria than nonporous particles. All in all, MaPoS particles represent a novel generation of magnetic beads introducing for the first time a porous, biocompatible and easy to functionalize scaffold and show great potential for various biotechnological applications.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Solid-Phase Synthesis of Asymmetrically Branched Sequence-Defined Poly/Oligo(amidoamines)

Felix Wojcik; Simone Mosca; Laura Hartmann

We present for the first time the synthesis of asymmetrically branched sequence-defined poly/oligo(amidoamines) (PAAs) using solid-phase synthesis with the capability of introducing diversity at the side chains. We introduce two new versatile (diethylenetriamine) building blocks for solid-phase synthesis bearing Fmoc/Boc and Fmoc/Alloc protecting groups expanding recently used Fmoc/Boc protecting group strategy for linear PAAs to an Fmoc/Alloc/Boc strategy. This allows for orthogonal on-resin cleavage of Fmoc and Alloc protecting groups during solid-phase synthesis of PAAs with backbones differing in chain length and sequence. With these structures we then demonstrate the potential for generating asymmetrical branching by automated multiple on-resin cleavage of Alloc protecting groups as well as the introduction of side chains varying in length and number. Such systems have high potential as nonviral vectors for gene delivery and will allow for more detailed studies on the correlation between the degree of branching of PAAs and their resulting biological properties.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Mechanical carbohydrate sensors based on soft hydrogel particles.

Daniel Pussak; Daniela Ponader; Simone Mosca; Salomé Vargas Ruiz; Laura Hartmann; Stephan Schmidt

Elastic sensors: A simple method is presented for the measurement of specific biomolecular interactions with soft colloidal hydrogel particles (SCPs) as sensors. Carbohydrate/lectin interactions (see picture; green: carbohydrate molecules) were studied by optical detection of the mechanical deformation of the particles on a lectin surface. The affinity of various carbohydrate inhibitors could also be readily determined.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2011

Precise Positioning of Chiral Building Blocks in Monodisperse, Sequence-Defined Polyamides

Simone Mosca; Felix Wojcik; Laura Hartmann

The synthesis of monodisperse polymers with a defined monomer sequence is a new challenge in polymer chemistry. Recently, we introduced a novel synthetic strategy towards monodisperse, sequence-defined poly(amidoamine)s based on the stepwise assembly of diamine and diacid building blocks on a solid support. Here we introduce the first chiral building block suitable for the automated poly(amidoamine) synthesis. The synthetic strategy utilizes natural amino acids as starting materials, thus providing a variety of chiral building blocks with different functionalities in the side chain. As a first chiral monomer, L-alanine is transformed into a mono Fmoc-protected diamine building block and successfully introduced into poly(amide) segments.


Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Probing multivalency in ligand-receptor-mediated adhesion of soft, biomimetic interfaces.

Stephan Schmidt; Hanqing Wang; Daniel Pussak; Simone Mosca; Laura Hartmann

Summary Many biological functions at cell level are mediated by the glycocalyx, a dense carbohydrate-presenting layer. In this layer specific interactions between carbohydrate ligands and protein receptors are formed to control cell–cell recognition, cell adhesion and related processes. The aim of this work is to shed light on the principles of complex formation between surface anchored carbohydrates and receptor surfaces by measuring the specific adhesion between surface bound mannose on a concanavalin A (ConA) layer via poly(ethylene glycol)-(PEG)-based soft colloidal probes (SCPs). Special emphasis is on the dependence of multivalent presentation and density of carbohydrate units on specific adhesion. Consequently, we first present a synthetic strategy that allows for controlled density variation of functional groups on the PEG scaffold using unsaturated carboxylic acids (crotonic acid, acrylic acid, methacrylic acid) as grafting units for mannose conjugation. We showed by a range of analytic techniques (ATR–FTIR, Raman microscopy, zeta potential and titration) that this synthetic strategy allows for straightforward variation in grafting density and grafting length enabling the controlled presentation of mannose units on the PEG network. Finally we determined the specific adhesion of PEG-network-conjugated mannose units on ConA surfaces as a function of density and grafting type. Remarkably, the results indicated the absence of a molecular-level enhancement of mannose/ConA interaction due to chelate- or subsite-binding. The results seem to support the fact that weak carbohydrate interactions at mechanically flexible interfaces hardly undergo multivalent binding but are simply mediated by the high number of ligand–receptor interactions.


Biomacromolecules | 2014

Amphiphilic Cationic ß3R3-Peptides: Membrane Active Peptidomimetics and Their Potential as Antimicrobial Agents

Simone Mosca; Janos Keller; Nahid Azzouz; Stefanie Wagner; Alexander Titz; Peter H. Seeberger; Gerald Brezesinski; Laura Hartmann

We introduce a novel class of membrane active peptidomimetics, the amphiphilic cationic β(3R3)-peptides, and evaluate their potential as antimicrobial agents. The design criteria, the building block and oligomer synthesis as well as a detailed structure-activity relationship (SAR) study are reported. Specifically, infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) was employed to investigate structural features of amphiphilic cationic β(3R3)-peptide sequences at the hydrophobic/hydrophilic air/liquid interface. Furthermore, Langmuir monolayers of anionic and zwitterionic phospholipids have been used to model the interactions of amphiphilic cationic β(3R3)-peptides with prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular membranes in order to predict their membrane selectivity and elucidate their mechanism of action. Lastly, antimicrobial activity was tested against Gram-positive M. luteus and S. aureus as well as against Gram-negative E. coli and P. aeruginosa bacteria along with testing hemolytic activity and cytotoxicity. We found that amphiphilic cationic β(3R3)-peptide sequences combine high and selective antimicrobial activity with exceptionally low cytotoxicity in comparison to values reported in the literature. Overall, this study provides further insights into the SAR of antimicrobial peptides and peptidomimetics and indicates that amphiphilic cationic β(3R3)-peptides are strong candidates for further development as antimicrobial agents with high therapeutic index.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2013

β(3R3)-Peptides: design and synthesis of novel peptidomimetics and their self-assembling properties at the air-water interface

Simone Mosca; Claudia Dannehl; Uwe Möginger; Gerald Brezesinski; Laura Hartmann

In this study we present the design and synthesis of a novel class of peptidomimetics, the β(3R3)-peptides. Via alternating directions of the amide bonds along β-peptide sequences, β(3R3)-peptides can potentially extend the structural space available to β-peptidic foldamers. Detailed analysis at the air-water interface shows strand conformations and the formation of sheet assemblies with different degrees of crystallinity. Furthermore β(3R3)-peptides exhibit a high proteolytic stability thus making them an interesting new class of peptidomimetics for biomedical applications.


Langmuir | 2014

Specific adhesion of carbohydrate hydrogel particles in competition with multivalent inhibitors evaluated by AFM.

Daniel Pussak; Daniela Ponader; Simone Mosca; Tilo Pompe; Laura Hartmann; Stephan Schmidt


Archive | 2014

Recent Advances in Solid Phase Polymer Synthesis: Polyamides from Tailor-Made Building Blocks

Felix Wojcik; Daniela Ponader; Simone Mosca; Laura Hartmann


Archive | 2013

Monodisperse, sequence-defined glycomacromolecules for biomedical applications

Felix Wojcik; Daniel Pussak; Daniela Ponader; Simone Mosca; Sinaida Lel; Stephan Schmidt; Laura Hartmann

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Laura Hartmann

University of Düsseldorf

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Stephan Schmidt

University of Düsseldorf

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