Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ulrica Edlund is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ulrica Edlund.


Nature | 2004

Self-assembly of amphiphilic dendritic dipeptides into helical pores

Virgil Percec; Andrés E. Dulcey; Venkatachalapathy S. K. Balagurusamy; Yoshiko Miura; Jan Smidrkal; Mihai Peterca; Sami Nummelin; Ulrica Edlund; Steven D. Hudson; Paul A. Heiney; Hu Duan; Sergei N. Magonov; Sergei A. Vinogradov

Natural pore-forming proteins act as viral helical coats and transmembrane channels, exhibit antibacterial activity and are used in synthetic systems, such as for reversible encapsulation or stochastic sensing. These diverse functions are intimately linked to protein structure. The close link between protein structure and protein function makes the design of synthetic mimics a formidable challenge, given that structure formation needs to be carefully controlled on all hierarchy levels, in solution and in the bulk. In fact, with few exceptions, synthetic pore structures capable of assembling into periodically ordered assemblies that are stable in solution and in the solid state have not yet been realized. In the case of dendrimers, covalent and non-covalent coating and assembly of a range of different structures has only yielded closed columns. Here we describe a library of amphiphilic dendritic dipeptides that self-assemble in solution and in bulk through a complex recognition process into helical pores. We find that the molecular recognition and self-assembly process is sufficiently robust to tolerate a range of modifications to the amphiphile structure, while preliminary proton transport measurements establish that the pores are functional. We expect that this class of self-assembling dendrimers will allow the design of a variety of biologically inspired systems with functional properties arising from their porous structure.


Advances in Polymer Science | 2002

Degradable Polymer Microspheres for Controlled Drug Delivery

Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Controlled drug delivery technology is concerned with the systematic release of a pharmaceutical agent to maintain a therapeutic level of the drug in the body for a sustained period of time. This may be achieved by incorporating the therapeutic agent into a degradable polymer vehicle, releasing the agent continuously as the matrix erodes. This review is concerned with degradable polymers for use in controlled drug delivery with emphasis on the preparation, applications, biocompatibility, and stability of microspheres from hydrolytically degradable polymers.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2003

Polyesters based on diacid monomers

Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Polymers with ester linkages in their main chain comprise a family of polymers with immense diversity and versatility. This review deals with the preparation of such polymers from dicarboxylic acid monomers, and the result in terms of properties and applicability. Polyesters alone, and their copolymers with amides, anhydrides, urethanes, imides, ethers or other functional groups, offer countless opportunities to tune the properties of the resulting material within a broad range. Of particular interest is the inherent biodegradability of the ester linkage. Biodegradability is sought after in a wide range of applications, above all in the preparation of environmentally friendly polymers and biomedical materials for temporary surgical use and in drug delivery.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Barrier Films from Renewable Forestry Waste

Ulrica Edlund; Yingzhi Zhu Ryberg; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Biobased free-standing films and coatings with low oxygen permeability were designed from a wood hydrolysate according to a recovery and formulation procedure that provides added value to wood converting industrial processes. Wood components released to the wastewater in the hydrothermal treatment of spruce wood were recovered and converted to an oligo- and polysaccharide-rich, noncellulosic fraction that was utilized in film formulations in a range of concentrations and compositions. Free-standing smooth and transparent films as well as coatings on thin PET were prepared and characterized with respect to oxygen permeability, tensile properties, structure, and water vapor transmission. With oxygen permeabilities as low as below 1 cm(3) μm m(-2) day(-1) kPa(-1) and with adequate mechanical properties, the films and coatings show promising property profiles for renewable packaging applications.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

A strategy for the covalent functionalization of resorbable polymers with heparin and osteoinductive growth factor

Ulrica Edlund; Staffan Dånmark; Ann-Christine Albertsson

The chemical strategy presented herein is the nondestructive preparation of resorbable polymer scaffolds with heparin covalently bonded to the surface and an osteoinductive growth factor, recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2, immobilized in the heparin layer. The coupling scheme involves functionalization of surfaces by grafting in the vapor phase with poly( l-lactide) and poly(-caprolactone) films chosen as representative substrates. The biocompatibility of functionalized surfaces was verified by a much improved attachment and proliferation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC).


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Conceptual approach to renewable barrier film design based on wood hydrolysate.

Y. Z. Zhu Ryberg; Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Biomass is converted to oxygen barriers through a conceptually unconventional approach involving the preservation of the biomass native interactions and macromolecular components and enhancing the effect by created interactions with a co-component. A combined calculation/assessment model is elaborated to understand, quantify, and predict which compositions that provide an intermolecular affinity high enough to mediate the molecular packing needed to create a functioning barrier. The biomass used is a wood hydrolysate, a polysaccharide-rich but not highly refined mixture where a fair amount of the native intermolecular and intramolecular hemicelluloses-lignin interactions are purposely preserved, resulting in barriers with very low oxygen permeabilities (OP) both at 50 and 80% relative humidity and considerably lower OPs than coatings based on the corresponding highly purified spruce hemicellulose, O-acetyl galactoglucomannan (AcGGM). The component interactions and mutual affinities effectively mediate an immobilization of the chain segments in a dense disordered structure, modeled through the Hansens solubility parameter concept and quantified on the nanolength scale by positron annihilation lifetime spectrum (PALS).


Langmuir | 2010

Surface Modification Changes the Degradation Process and Degradation Product Pattern of Polylactide

Anders Höglund; Minna Hakkarainen; Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson

The effect of surface modification on the degradation process and degradation product patterns of degradable polymers is still a basically unexplored area even though a significant effect can be expected. Polylactide (PLA) and PLA grafted with acrylic acid (PLA-AA) were, thus, subjected to hydrolytic degradation, and water-soluble degradation products were determined by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) after different time periods. Low molar mass compounds migrated from surface-grafted PLA already during the first 7 days at 37 degrees C, while it took 133 days in the case of nongrafted PLA before any low molar mass compounds were detected in the aging water. In addition, the degradation product pattern of surface-grafted PLA showed significant variation as a function of hydrolysis time with the evolution of short and long AA-grafted lactic acid oligomers as well as plain lactic acid oligomers after different time periods. The degradation product pattern of plain PLA consisted of lactic acid and its oligomers with up to 13 lactic acid units. Surface grafting, thus, changed the degradation product patterns and accelerated the formation of water-soluble degradation products.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Hemicellulose-Based Multifunctional Macroinitiator for Single-Electron-Transfer Mediated Living Radical Polymerization

Jens Voepel; Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson; Virgil Percec

A multifunctional macroinitiator for single-electron-transfer mediated living radical polymerization (SET-LRP) was designed from acetylated galactoglucomannan (AcGGM) by α-bromoisobutyric acid functionalization of the anomeric hydroxyl groups on the heteropolysaccharide backbone. This macroinitiator, with a degree of substitution of 0.15, was used in the SET-LRP of methyl acrylate, catalyzed by Cu(0)/Me(6)-TREN in DMSO, DMF, or DMSO/H(2)O in various concentrations. Kinetic analyses confirm high conversions of up to 99.98% and a living behavior of the SET-LRP process providing high molecular weight hemicelluloses/methyl acrylate hybrid copolymers with a brush-like architecture.


Biomacromolecules | 2012

Wood hydrolysate barriers: performance controlled via selective recovery.

Anas Ibn Yaich; Ulrica Edlund; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Films and coatings were produced from a noncellulosic polysaccharide-rich wood hydrolysate (WH), and the resulting oxygen barrier performance was improved by a selective choice of upgrading conditions. The WH was obtained from process water in the hydrothermal treatment of hardwood and subjected to one of three alternative upgrading treatments, resulting in xylan-rich fractions with significant differences in structure, composition, and properties of the recovered WH fractions, which in turn had a major impact on their performance with respect to tensile and oxygen barrier properties. The WH in the least upgraded state, the crudest fraction, produced films with the best performance in terms of oxygen permeability and was superior to corresponding films based on highly purified hemicellulose.


Biomacromolecules | 2015

In Situ Synthesis of Magnetic Field-Responsive Hemicellulose Hydrogels for Drug Delivery

Weifeng Zhao; Karin Odelius; Ulrica Edlund; Changsheng Zhao; Ann-Christine Albertsson

A one-pot synthetic methodology for fabricating stimuli-responsive hemicellulose-based hydrogels was developed that consists of the in situ formation of magnetic iron oxide (Fe3O4) nanoparticles during the covalent cross-linking of O-acetyl-galactoglucomannan (AcGGM). The Fe3O4 nanoparticle content controlled the thermal stability, macrostructure, swelling behavior, and magnetization of the hybrid hydrogels. In addition, the magnetic field-responsive hemicellulose hydrogels (MFRHHs) exhibited excellent adsorption and controlled release profiles with bovine serum albumin (BSA) as the model drug. Therefore, the MFRHHs have great potential to be utilized in the biomedical field for tissue engineering applications, controlled drug delivery, and magnetically assisted bioseparation. Magnetic field-responsive hemicellulose hydrogels, prepared using a straightforward one-step process, expand the applications of biomass-derived polysaccharides by combining the renewability of hemicellulose and the magnetism of Fe3O4 nanoparticles.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ulrica Edlund's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Virgil Percec

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrés E. Dulcey

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul A. Heiney

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martina Källrot

Royal Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Soheil Saadatmand

Royal Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven D. Hudson

National Institute of Standards and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anas Ibn Yaich

Royal Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonia Svärd

Royal Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge