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Dive into the research topics where Tatiana Da Ros is active.

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Featured researches published by Tatiana Da Ros.


Nature Chemistry | 2010

Efficient water oxidation at carbon nanotube–polyoxometalate electrocatalytic interfaces

Francesca M. Toma; Andrea Sartorel; Matteo Iurlo; Mauro Carraro; Pietro Parisse; Chiara Maccato; Stefania Rapino; Benito Rodriguez Gonzalez; Heinz Amenitsch; Tatiana Da Ros; Loredana Casalis; A. Goldoni; Massimo Marcaccio; Gianfranco Scorrano; G. Scoles; Francesco Paolucci; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

Water is the renewable, bulk chemical that nature uses to enable carbohydrate production from carbon dioxide. The dream goal of energy research is to transpose this incredibly efficient process and make an artificial device whereby the catalytic splitting of water is finalized to give a continuous production of oxygen and hydrogen. Success in this task would guarantee the generation of hydrogen as a carbon-free fuel to satisfy our energy demands at no environmental cost. Here we show that very efficient and stable nanostructured, oxygen-evolving anodes are obtained by the assembly of an oxygen-evolving polyoxometalate cluster (a totally inorganic ruthenium catalyst) with a conducting bed of multiwalled carbon nanotubes. Our bioinspired electrode addresses the one major challenge of artificial photosynthesis, namely efficient water oxidation, which brings us closer to being able to power the planet with carbon-free fuels.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Targeting carbon nanotubes against cancer

Chiara Fabbro; Hanene Ali-Boucetta; Tatiana Da Ros; Kostas Kostarelos; Alberto Bianco; Maurizio Prato

The use of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as polyvalent tools for cancer treatment is progressing at a very fast pace. The most promising approach is the targeted delivery of drugs, designed to selectively direct the therapeutic treatment towards the tumours. CNTs may offer several advantages to overcome one of the main limitations of most existing anticancer therapies, namely the lack of selectivity. Herein, an account of the existing literature on CNT-based nanomedicine for cancer treatment is given. The most significant results obtained so far in the field of drug delivery are presented for many anticancer chemotherapeutics (doxorubicin, methotrexate, taxanes, platinum analogues, camptothecine and gemcitabine), but also for immunotherapeutics and nucleic acids. Moreover, the alternative anticancer therapies based on thermal ablation and radiotherapy are discussed. The attention throughout the review is focused on the different targeting strategies proposed so far, mainly based on antibodies, but also on other specifically recognised molecules or on the application of an external magnetic field.


Chemical Communications | 1999

Medicinal chemistry with fullerenes and fullerene derivatives

Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato

The study of the biological applications of fullerenes has attracted increasing attention despite the low solubility of the carbon spheres in physiological media. The organic functionalisation of fullerenes has helped solubilisation by covalent attachment of hydrophilic appendages. Therefore, recently synthesised fullerene derivatives reach satisfactory concentrations in water. However, the tendency of the fullerenes to form clusters is enhanced in polar media, where better solubilisation can be achieved by means of multiple functionalisation or using micellar systems. Once homogeneously dissolved, the fullerenes and fullerene derivatives exhibit an interesting range of biological activities, especially promising in the field of photodynamic therapy, HIV, neuroprotection and apoptosis.


Nanoscale | 2011

Fullerene C60 as a multifunctional system for drug and gene delivery

Alejandro Montellano; Tatiana Da Ros; Alberto Bianco; Maurizio Prato

The fullerene family, and especially C(60), has delighted the scientific community during the last 25 years with perspective applications in a wide variety of fields, including the biological and the biomedical domains. Several biomedical uses have been explored using water-soluble C(60)-derivatives. However, the employment of fullerenes for drug delivery is still at an early stage of development. The design and synthesis of multifunctionalized and multimodal C(60) systems able to cross the cell membranes and efficiently deliver active molecules is an attracting challenge that involves multidisciplinary strategies. Promising results have emerged in the last years, bringing fullerenes again to the front of interest. Herein, the state of the art of this emerging field is presented and illustrated with some of the most representative examples.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Synthesis and Characterization of a Carbon Nanotube−Dendron Series for Efficient siRNA Delivery

M. Antonia Herrero; Francesca M. Toma; Khuloud T. Al-Jamal; Kostas Kostarelos; Alberto Bianco; Tatiana Da Ros; Fouzia Bano; Loredana Casalis; G. Scoles; Maurizio Prato

A new series of dendron-functionalized multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWNT) derivatives, characterized by the presence of numerous positively charged tetraalkyl ammonium salts at the periphery of the dendron, has been synthesized. The positive charges on the MWNT surface, coupled with the unique ability of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to penetrate cell membranes, make the new derivatives potentially ideal vectors for siRNA delivery. Using a fluorescently labeled, noncoding siRNA sequence, we demonstrate that cytoplasmic delivery of the nucleic acid is remarkably increased throughout the different dendron generations. The work reported here highlights the fact that dendron-functionalized CNTs can be rationally designed as efficient carriers of siRNA that can eventually lead to gene silencing.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2013

Endowing carbon nanotubes with biological and biomedical properties by chemical modifications.

Alessia Battigelli; Cécilia Ménard-Moyon; Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato; Alberto Bianco

The scope of nanotechnology is gaining importance in biology and medicine. Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have emerged as a promising tool due to their unique properties, high specific surface area, and capacity to cross biological barriers. These properties offer a variety of opportunities for applications in nanomedicine, such as diagnosis, disease treatment, imaging, and tissue engineering. Nevertheless, pristine CNTs are insoluble in water and in most organic solvents; thereby functionalization of their surface is necessary to increase biocompatibility. Derivatization of CNTs also gives the possibility to conjugate different biological and bioactive molecules including drugs, proteins, and targeting ligands. This review focuses on the chemical modifications of CNTs that have been developed to impart specific properties for biological and medical purposes. Biomolecules can be covalently grafted or non-covalently adsorbed on the nanotube surface. In addition, the inner core of CNTs can be exploited to encapsulate drugs, nanoparticles, or radioactive elements.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Enhanced anticancer activity of multi-walled carbon nanotube–methotrexate conjugates using cleavable linkers

Cristian Samorì; Hanene Ali-Boucetta; Raquel Sainz; Chang Guo; Francesca M. Toma; Chiara Fabbro; Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato; Kostas Kostarelos; Alberto Bianco

Methotrexate was tethered to multi-walled carbon nanotubes through different cleavable linkers exploiting the ammonium functionalities introduced by 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reaction of azomethine ylides to the nanotubes. The new nanobio-hybrid conjugates were internalized into human breast cancer cells and it was shown that the cytotoxic activity was strongly dependent on the presence and type of linker.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Antimycobacterial Activity of Ionic Fullerene Derivatives

Susanna Bosi; Tatiana Da Ros; Sabrina Castellano; Elena Banfi; Maurizio Prato

Positively charged fullerene derivatives, moderately soluble in water:DMSO 9:1, have been tested using three strains of Mycobacterium spp. Some compounds inhibit the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a human clinical isolate, particularly virulent and resistant, at doses as low as 5 microg/mL.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2001

Efficient Charge Separation in Porphyrin-Fullerene-Ligand Complexes

Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato; Dirk M. Guldi; Marco Ruzzi; Luigi Pasimeni

Photoprocesses associated with the complexation of a pyridine-functionalized C60 fullerene derivative to ruthenium- and zinc-tetraphenylporphyrins (tpp) have been studied by time-resolved optical and transient EPR spectroscopies. It has been found that upon irradiation in toluene, a highly efficient triplet-triplet energy transfer governs the deactivation of the photoexcited [Ru(tpp)], while electron transfer (ET) from the porphyrin to the fullerene prevails in polar solvents. Complexation of [Zn(tpp)] by the fullerene derivative is reversible and, following excitation of the [Zn(tpp)], gives rise to very efficient charge separation. In fluid polar solvents such as THF and benzonitrile, radical-ion pairs (RPs) are generated both by intramolecular ET inside the complex and by intermolecular ET in the uncomplexed form. Charge-separated states have lifetimes of about 10 micros in THF and several hundred of microseconds in benzonitrile at room temperature.


ACS Nano | 2013

Knitting the Catalytic Pattern of Artificial Photosynthesis to a Hybrid Graphene Nanotexture

Mildred Quintana; Alejandro Montellano López; Stefania Rapino; Francesca M. Toma; Matteo Iurlo; Mauro Carraro; Andrea Sartorel; Chiara Maccato; Xiaoxing Ke; Carla Bittencourt; Tatiana Da Ros; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Massimo Marcaccio; Francesco Paolucci; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

The artificial leaf project calls for new materials enabling multielectron catalysis with minimal overpotential, high turnover frequency, and long-term stability. Is graphene a better material than carbon nanotubes to enhance water oxidation catalysis for energy applications? Here we show that functionalized graphene with a tailored distribution of polycationic, quaternized, ammonium pendants provides an sp(2) carbon nanoplatform to anchor a totally inorganic tetraruthenate catalyst, mimicking the oxygen evolving center of natural PSII. The resulting hybrid material displays oxygen evolution at overpotential as low as 300 mV at neutral pH with negligible loss of performance after 4 h testing. This multilayer electroactive asset enhances the turnover frequency by 1 order of magnitude with respect to the isolated catalyst, and provides a definite up-grade of the carbon nanotube material, with a similar surface functionalization. Our innovation is based on a noninvasive, synthetic protocol for graphene functionalization that goes beyond the ill-defined oxidation-reduction methods, allowing a definite control of the surface properties.

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Dirk M. Guldi

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Alberto Bianco

University of Strasbourg

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Francesca M. Toma

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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