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Dive into the research topics where Stefano C. Meliga is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefano C. Meliga.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Analysis of the Hydration Water around Bovine Serum Albumin Using Terahertz Coherent Synchrotron Radiation

Jordan W. Bye; Stefano C. Meliga; Denis Ferachou; Gianfelice Cinque; J. Axel Zeitler; Robert J. Falconer

Terahertz spectroscopy was used to study the absorption of bovine serum albumin (BSA) in water. The Diamond Light Source operating in a low alpha mode generated coherent synchrotron radiation that covered a useable spectral bandwidth of 0.3-3.3 THz (10-110 cm(-1)). As the BSA concentration was raised, there was a nonlinear change in absorption inconsistent with Beers law. At low BSA concentrations (0-1 mM), the absorption remained constant or rose slightly. Above a concentration of 1 mM BSA, a steady decrease in absorption was observed, which was followed by a plateau that started at 2.5 mM. Using a overlapping hydration layer model, the hydration layer was estimated to extend 15 Å from the protein. Calculation of the corrected absorption coefficient (αcorr) for the water around BSA by subtracting the excluded volume of the protein provides an alternative approach to studying the hydration layer that provides evidence for complexity in the population of water around BSA.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2014

Colocalization of Cell Death with Antigen Deposition in Skin Enhances Vaccine Immunogenicity

A. C. I. Depelsenaire; Stefano C. Meliga; Celia L. McNeilly; Frances E. Pearson; Jacob W. Coffey; Oscar Haigh; C. Flaim; M. A. F. Kendall

Vaccines delivered to the skin by microneedles – with and without adjuvants – have increased immunogenicity with lower doses than standard vaccine delivery techniques such as intramuscular (i.m.) or intradermal (i.d.) injection. However, the mechanisms behind this skin-mediated ‘adjuvant’ effect are not clear. Here, we show that the dynamic application of a microprojection array (the Nanopatch) to skin generates localized transient stresses invoking cell death around each projection. Nanopatch application caused significantly higher levels (~65-fold) of cell death in murine ear skin than i.d. injection using a hypodermic needle. Measured skin cell death is associated with modeled stresses ~1–10 MPa. Nanopatch-immunized groups also yielded consistently higher anti-IgG endpoint titers (up to 50-fold higher) than i.d. groups after delivery of a split virion influenza vaccine. Importantly, co-localization of cell death with nearby live skin cells and delivered antigen was necessary for immunogenicity enhancement. These results suggest a correlation between cell death caused by the Nanopatch with increased immunogenicity. We propose that the localized cell death serves as a ‘physical immune enhancer’ for the adjacent viable skin cells, which also receive antigen from the projections. This natural immune enhancer effect has the potential to mitigate or replace chemical-based adjuvants in vaccines.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2013

Depth-resolved characterization of diffusion properties within and across minimally-perturbed skin layers

Anthony P. Raphael; Stefano C. Meliga; Xianfeng Chen; Germain J. P. Fernando; C. Flaim; M. A. F. Kendall

We examine by both experimental and computational means the diffusion of macromolecules through the skin strata (both the epidermis and dermis). Using mouse skin as a test case, we present a novel high-resolution technique to characterize the diffusion properties of heterogeneous biomaterials using 3D imaging of fluorescent probes, precisely-deposited in minimally-perturbed in vivo skin layers. We find the diffusivity of the delivered macromolecules (70 kDa and 2 MDa rhodamine-dextrans) low within the packed cellular arrangement of the epidermis, while gradually increasing (by ~an order of magnitude) through the dermis--as pores in the fibrillar network enlarge from the papillary to the reticular dermis. Our experimental and computational approaches for investigating the diffusion through skin strata help in the assessment and optimization of controlled delivery of drugs (e.g. vaccines) to specific sites (e.g. antigen presenting cells).


Journal of Controlled Release | 2016

Formulations for microprojection/microneedle vaccine delivery: structure, strength and release profiles

Anthony P. Raphael; Michael L. Crichton; Robert J. Falconer; Stefano C. Meliga; Xianfeng Chen; Germain J. P. Fernando; Han Huang; M. A. F. Kendall

To develop novel methods for vaccine delivery, the skin is viewed as a high potential target, due to the abundance of immune cells that reside therein. One method, the use of dissolving microneedle technologies, has the potential to achieve this, with a range of formulations now being employed. Within this paper we assemble a range of methods (including FT-FIR using synchrotron radiation, nanoindentation and skin delivery assays) to systematically examine the effect of key bulking agents/excipients - sugars/polyols - on the material form, structure, strength, failure properties, diffusion and dissolution for dissolving microdevices. We investigated concentrations of mannitol, sucrose, trehalose and sorbitol from 1:1 to 30:1 with carboxymethylcellulose (CMC), although mannitol did not form our micro-structures so was discounted early in the study. The other formulations showed a variety of crystalline (sorbitol) and amorphous (sucrose, trehalose) structures, when investigated using Fourier transform far infra-red (FT-FIR) with synchrotron radiation. The crystalline structures had a higher elastic modulus than the amorphous formulations (8-12GPa compared to 0.05-11GPa), with sorbitol formulations showing a bimodal distribution of results including both amorphous and crystalline behaviour. In skin, diffusion properties were similar among all formulations with dissolution occurring within 5s for our small projection array structures (~100μm in length). Overall, slight variations in formulation can significantly change the ability of our projections to perform their required function, making the choice of bulking/vaccine stabilising agents of great importance for these devices.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2014

CXCL1 gene silencing in skin using liposome-encapsulated siRNA delivered by microprojection array

Oscar Haigh; A. C. I. Depelsenaire; Stefano C. Meliga; Sally R. Yukiko; Nigel A.J. McMillan; M. A. F. Kendall

The barrier morphology of skin provides major obstacles for the application of siRNA for gene silencing, which current delivery technologies do not effectively overcome. Emerging technologies utilise microprojection array devices to penetrate into the skin epidermis and dermis for delivery of drug payloads. Delivery of siRNA by such devices has been proven in principle, yet requires optimisation for clinical applications. Herein, we demonstrate the use of Nanopatch™ microprojection arrays to deliver liposome-encapsulated siRNA to overcome skin barrier, and in vivo siRNA delivery hurdles. This application provided effective silencing of CXCL1 expression induced by the co-delivery of Fluvax 2012® by microprojection array. Liposomes encapsulating siRNA were dry-coated onto microprojection arrays, and remained intact after elution from arrays in vitro. Microprojection arrays facilitated the delivery of fluorescently-labelled nucleic acids through murine ear stratum corneum to the epidermis and dermis, with diffusion from microprojections into adjacent skin evident within 30s. CXCL1 mRNA, induced by delivery of Fluvax by microprojection array, was reduced by 75% up to 20 h post-treatment by co-delivery of liposome-encapsulated CXCL1-specific siRNA, but not by arrays co-delivering liposome-encapsulated control siRNA. CXCL1 protein expression in explant cultures from skin treated with arrays bearing CXCL1 specific or control siRNA was similarly reduced. These results as a test case have many implications for gene silencing in skin and inflammation, with the benefit of targeted delivery using microprojection arrays to deliver liposome-encapsulated siRNA.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2017

The hyperelastic and failure behaviors of skin in relation to the dynamic application of microscopic penetrators in a murine model

Stefano C. Meliga; Jacob W. Coffey; Michael L. Crichton; C. Flaim; M. Veidt; M. A. F. Kendall

In-depth understanding of skin elastic and rupture behavior is fundamental to enable next-generation biomedical devices to directly access areas rich in cells and biomolecules. However, the paucity of skin mechanical characterization and lack of established fracture models limits their rational design. We present an experimental and numerical study of skin mechanics during dynamic interaction with individual and arrays of micro-penetrators. Initially, micro-indentation of individual skin strata revealed hyperelastic moduli were dramatically rate-dependent, enabling extrapolation of stiffness properties at high velocity regimes (>1ms-1). A layered finite-element model satisfactorily predicted the penetration of micro-penetrators using characteristic fracture energies (∼10pJμm-2) significantly lower than previously reported (≫100pJμm-2). Interestingly, with our standard application conditions (∼2ms-1, 35gpistonmass), ∼95% of the application kinetic energy was transferred to the backing support rather than the skin ∼5% (murine ear model). At higher velocities (∼10ms-1) strain energy accumulated in the top skin layers, initiating fracture before stress waves transmitted deformation to the backing material, increasing energy transfer efficiency to 55%. Thus, the tools developed provide guidelines to rationally engineer skin penetrators to increase depth targeting consistency and payload delivery across patients whilst minimizing penetration energy to control skin inflammation, tolerability and acceptability. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE The mechanics of skin penetration by dynamically-applied microscopic tips is investigated using a combined experimental-computational approach. A FE model of skin is parameterized using indentation tests and a ductile-failure implementation validated against penetration assays. The simulations shed light on skin elastic and fracture properties, and elucidate the interaction with microprojection arrays for vaccine delivery allowing rational design of next-generation devices.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2016

Characterising the material properties at the interface between skin and a skin vaccination microprojection device

Michael L. Crichton; Cameron Archer-Jones; Stefano C. Meliga; Grant Edwards; Darren J. Martin; Han Huang; M. A. F. Kendall

UNLABELLED The rapid emergence of micro-devices for biomedical applications over the past two decades has introduced new challenges for the materials used in the devices. Devices like microneedles and the Nanopatch, require sufficient strength to puncture skin often with sharp-slender micro-scale profiles, while maintaining mechanical integrity. For these technologies we sought to address two important questions: 1) On the scale at which the device operates, what forces are required to puncture the skin? And 2) What loads can the projections/microneedles withstand prior to failure. First, we used custom fabricated nanoindentation micro-probes to puncture skin at the micrometre scale, and show that puncture forces are ∼0.25-1.75mN for fresh mouse skin, in agreement with finite element simulations for our device. Then, we used two methods to perform strength tests of Nanopatch projections with varied aspect ratios. The first method used a nanoindenter to apply a force directly on the top or on the side of individual silicon projections (110μm in length, 10μm base radius), to measure the force of fracture. Our second method used an Instron to fracture full rows of projections and characterise a range of projection designs (with the method verified against previous nanoindentation experiments). Finally, we used Cryo-Scanning Electron Microscopy to visualise projections in situ in the skin to confirm the behaviour we quantified, qualitatively. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE Micro-device development has proliferated in the past decade, including devices that interact with tissues for biomedical outcomes. The field of microneedles for vaccine delivery to skin has opened new material challenges both in understanding tissue material properties and device material. In this work we characterise both the biomaterial properties of skin and the material properties of our microprojection vaccine delivery device. This study directly measures the micro-scale puncture properties of skin, whilst demonstrating clearly how these relate to device design. This will be of strong interest to those in the field of biomedical microdevices. This includes work in the field of wearable and semi-implantable devices, which will require clear understanding of tissue behaviour and material characterisation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Cold-induced precipitation of a monoclonal IgM: a negative activation enthalpy reaction.

Stefano C. Meliga; William Farrugia; Paul A. Ramsland; Robert J. Falconer

Cold-induced precipitation of a monoclonal IgM cryoglobulin isolated from a patient with Waldenströms macroglobulinemia was observed to have a negative activation enthalpy. The rate of the reaction increased, as the temperature decreased. Differential scanning calorimetry of the monoclonal IgM showed precipitation as an inverted peak during a downward temperature scan. The transition temperature was between 14 and 15 °C and was possibly concentration dependent. At temperatures below the transition the precipitation was best described by second-order kinetics. The difference in change in enthalpy between precipitation and disassociation suggests that cold-induced precipitation had a fast precipitation stage followed by a slower consolidation reaction. Negligible curvature of the Eyring plot suggested the precipitation reaction was dominated by van der Waal forces and hydrogen bonding. Conversely, during an upward temperature scan, disassociation was observed as a positive enthalpy peak. This reaction had two stages, a reaction undoing consolidation followed by heat-induced disassociation that had first-order kinetics.


Biomaterials | 2016

Dynamic application of microprojection arrays to skin induces circulating protein extravasation for enhanced biomarker capture and detection

Jacob W. Coffey; Stefano C. Meliga; Simon R. Corrie; M. A. F. Kendall


Australian Journal of Multi-disciplinary Engineering | 2013

The mechanical stress caused by micro-projection arrays penetrating the skin for vaccine delivery

Stefano C. Meliga; C. Flaim; M. Veidt; M. A. F. Kendall

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C. Flaim

University of Queensland

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M. Veidt

University of Queensland

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Oscar Haigh

University of Queensland

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