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Dive into the research topics where Yoni Engel is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoni Engel.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

Supersensitive Detection of Explosives by Silicon Nanowire Arrays

Yoni Engel; Roey Elnathan; Alexander Pevzner; Guy Davidi; Eli Flaxer; Fernando Patolsky

There has been a great increase in the development of traceand ultra-trace explosive detection in the last decade, mainlybecause of the globalization of terrorist acts, and thereclamationofcontaminatedlandpreviouslyusedformilitarypurposes. In this regard, detection methods for traces ofexplosives continue to be hampered by the low volatility ofthe analytes and thus, the analytical problem remainschallenging.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Reversal of axonal loss and disability in a mouse model of progressive multiple sclerosis

Alexandre S. Basso; Dan Frenkel; Francisco J. Quintana; Frederico Azevedo Costa-Pinto; Sanja Petrovic-Stojkovic; Lindsay Puckett; Alon Monsonego; Amnon Bar-Shir; Yoni Engel; Michael Gozin; Howard L. Weiner

Axonal degeneration is an important determinant of progressive neurological disability in multiple sclerosis (MS). Thus, therapeutic approaches promoting neuroprotection could aid the treatment of progressive MS. Here, we used what we believe is a novel water-soluble fullerene derivative (ABS-75) attached to an NMDA receptor antagonist, which combines antioxidant and anti-excitotoxic properties, to block axonal damage and reduce disease progression in a chronic progressive EAE model. Fullerene ABS-75 treatment initiated after disease onset reduced the clinical progression of chronic EAE in NOD mice immunized with myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG). Reduced disease progression in ABS-75-treated mice was associated with reduced axonal loss and demyelination in the spinal cord. Fullerene ABS-75 halted oxidative injury, CD11b+ infiltration, and CCL2 expression in the spinal cord of mice without interfering with antigen-specific T cell responses. In vitro, fullerene ABS-75 protected neurons from oxidative and glutamate-induced injury and restored glutamine synthetase and glutamate transporter expression in astrocytes under inflammatory insult. Glutamine synthetase expression was also increased in the white matter of fullerene ABS-75-treated animals. Our data demonstrate the neuroprotective effect of treatment with a fullerene compound combined with a NMDA receptor antagonist, which may be useful in the treatment of progressive MS and other neurodegenerative diseases.


Nano Letters | 2012

Biorecognition Layer Engineering: Overcoming Screening Limitations of Nanowire-Based FET Devices

Roey Elnathan; Moria Kwiat; Alexander Pevzner; Yoni Engel; L. Burstein; Artium Khatchtourints; Amir Lichtenstein; Raisa Kantaev; Fernando Patolsky

Detection of biological species is of great importance to numerous areas of medical and life sciences from the diagnosis of diseases to the discovery of new drugs. Essential to the detection mechanism is the transduction of a signal associated with the specific recognition of biomolecules of interest. Nanowire-based electrical devices have been demonstrated as a powerful sensing platform for the highly sensitive detection of a wide-range of biological and chemical species. Yet, detecting biomolecules in complex biosamples of high ionic strength (>100 mM) is severely hampered by ionic screening effects. As a consequence, most of existing nanowire sensors operate under low ionic strength conditions, requiring ex situ biosample manipulation steps, that is, desalting processes. Here, we demonstrate an effective approach for the direct detection of biomolecules in untreated serum, based on the fragmentation of antibody-capturing units. Size-reduced antibody fragments permit the biorecognition event to occur in closer proximity to the nanowire surface, falling within the charge-sensitive Debye screening length. Furthermore, we explored the effect of antibody surface coverage on the resulting detection sensitivity limit under the high ionic strength conditions tested and found that lower antibody surface densities, in contrary to high antibody surface coverage, leads to devices of greater sensitivities. Thus, the direct and sensitive detection of proteins in untreated serum and blood samples was effectively performed down to the sub-pM concentration range without the requirement of biosamples manipulation.


Nature Communications | 2014

Supersensitive fingerprinting of explosives by chemically modified nanosensors arrays

Amir Lichtenstein; Ehud Havivi; Ronen Shacham; Ehud Hahamy; Ronit Leibovich; Alexander Pevzner; Vadim Krivitsky; Guy Davivi; Igor Presman; Roey Elnathan; Yoni Engel; Eli Flaxer; Fernando Patolsky

The capability to detect traces of explosives sensitively, selectively and rapidly could be of great benefit for applications relating to civilian national security and military needs. Here, we show that, when chemically modified in a multiplexed mode, nanoelectrical devices arrays enable the supersensitive discriminative detection of explosive species. The fingerprinting of explosives is achieved by pattern recognizing the inherent kinetics, and thermodynamics, of interaction between the chemically modified nanosensors array and the molecular analytes under test. This platform allows for the rapid detection of explosives, from air collected samples, down to the parts-per-quadrillion concentration range, and represents the first nanotechnology-inspired demonstration on the selective supersensitive detection of explosives, including the nitro- and peroxide-derivatives, on a single electronic platform. Furthermore, the ultrahigh sensitivity displayed by our platform may allow the remote detection of various explosives, a task unachieved by existing detection technologies.


Nano Letters | 2012

Confinement-guided shaping of semiconductor nanowires and nanoribbons: "writing with nanowires".

Alexander Pevzner; Yoni Engel; Roey Elnathan; A. Tsukernik; Zahava Barkay; Fernando Patolsky

To fully exploit their full potential, new semiconductor nanowire building blocks with ab initio controlled shapes are desired. However, and despite the great synthetic advances achieved, the ability to control nanowires geometry has been significantly limited. Here, we demonstrate a simple confinement-guided nanowire growth method that enables to predesign not only the chemical and physical attributes of the synthesized nanowires but also allows a perfect and unlimited control over their geometry. Our method allows the synthesis of semiconductor nanowires in a wide variety of two-dimensional shapes such as any kinked (different turning angles), sinusoidal, linear, and spiral shapes, so that practically any desired geometry can be defined. The shape-controlled nanowires can be grown on almost any substrate such as silicon wafer, quartz and glass slides, and even on plastic substrates (e.g., Kapton HN).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Non-covalent Monolayer-Piercing Anchoring of Lipophilic Nucleic Acids: Preparation, Characterization, and Sensing Applications

Moria Kwiat; Roey Elnathan; Minseok Kwak; Jan Willem de Vries; Alexander Pevzner; Yoni Engel; L. Burstein; Artium Khatchtourints; Amir Lichtenstein; Eli Flaxer; Andreas Herrmann; Fernando Patolsky

Functional interfaces of biomolecules and inorganic substrates like semiconductor materials are of utmost importance for the development of highly sensitive biosensors and microarray technology. However, there is still a lot of room for improving the techniques for immobilization of biomolecules, in particular nucleic acids and proteins. Conventional anchoring strategies rely on attaching biomacromolecules via complementary functional groups, appropriate bifunctional linker molecules, or non-covalent immobilization via electrostatic interactions. In this work, we demonstrate a facile, new, and general method for the reversible non-covalent attachment of amphiphilic DNA probes containing hydrophobic units attached to the nucleobases (lipid-DNA) onto SAM-modified gold electrodes, silicon semiconductor surfaces, and glass substrates. We show the anchoring of well-defined amounts of lipid-DNA onto the surface by insertion of their lipid tails into the hydrophobic monolayer structure. The surface coverage of DNA molecules can be conveniently controlled by modulating the initial concentration and incubation time. Further control over the DNA layer is afforded by the additional external stimulus of temperature. Heating the DNA-modified surfaces at temperatures >80 °C leads to the release of the lipid-DNA structures from the surface without harming the integrity of the hydrophobic SAMs. These supramolecular DNA layers can be further tuned by anchoring onto a mixed SAM containing hydrophobic molecules of different lengths, rather than a homogeneous SAM. Immobilization of lipid-DNA on such SAMs has revealed that the surface density of DNA probes is highly dependent on the composition of the surface layer and the structure of the lipid-DNA. The formation of the lipid-DNA sensing layers was monitored and characterized by numerous techniques including X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, quartz crystal microbalance, ellipsometry, contact angle measurements, atomic force microscopy, and confocal fluorescence imaging. Finally, this new DNA modification strategy was applied for the sensing of target DNAs using silicon-nanowire field-effect transistor device arrays, showing a high degree of specificity toward the complementary DNA target, as well as single-base mismatch selectivity.


Nano Letters | 2010

Knocking Down Highly-Ordered Large-Scale Nanowire Arrays

Alexander Pevzner; Yoni Engel; Roey Elnathan; Tamir Ducobni; Moshit Ben-Ishai; Koteeswara Reddy; Nava Shpaisman; A. Tsukernik; Mark Oksman; Fernando Patolsky


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2007

Phenanthroline-Derived Ratiometric Chemosensor for Ureas

Yoni Engel; Adi Dahan; Emily Rozenshine-Kemelmakher; Michael Gozin


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2005

Synthesis and Water Solubility of Adamantyl-OEG-fullerene Hybrids

Amnon Bar-Shir; Yoni Engel; Michael Gozin


Archive | 2010

Aligned nanoarray and method for fabricating the same

Fernando Patolsky; Tamir Ducobni; Alexander Pevzner; Yoni Engel; Roey Elnathan; Moshit Ben-Ishai

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Roey Elnathan

University of South Australia

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Amir Lichtenstein

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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