2 resultados para Reaction to histoplasmin

em Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship Repository


Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A micro gas sensor has been developed by our group for the detection of organo-phosphate vapors using an aqueous oxime solution. The analyte diffuses from the high flow rate gas stream through a porous membrane to the low flow rate aqueous phase. It reacts with the oxime PBO (1-Phenyl-1,2,3,-butanetrione 2-oxime) to produce cyanide ions, which are then detected electrochemically from the change in solution potential. Previous work on this oxime based electrochemistry indicated that the optimal buffer pH for the aqueous solution was approximately 10. A basic environment is needed for the oxime anion to form and the detection reaction to take place. At this specific pH, the potential response of the sensor to an analyte (such as acetic anhydride) is maximized. However, sensor response slowly decreases as the aqueous oxime solution ages, by as much as 80% in first 24 hours. The decrease in sensor response is due to cyanide which is produced during the oxime degradation process, as evidenced by the cyanide selective electrode. Solid phase micro-extraction carried out on the oxime solution found several other possible degradation products, including acetic acid, N-hydroxy benzamide, benzoic acid, benzoyl cyanide, 1-Phenyl 1,3-butadione, 2-isonitrosoacetophenone and an imine derived from the oxime. It was concluded that degradation occurred through nucleophilic attack by a hydroxide or oxime anion to produce cyanide, as well as a nitrogen atom rearrangement similar to Beckmann rearrangement. The stability of the oxime in organic solvents is most likely due to the lack of water, and specifically hydroxide ions. The reaction between oxime and organo-phosphate to produce cyanide ions requires hydroxide ions, and therefore pure organic solvents are not compatible with the current micro-sensor electrochemistry. By combining a concentrated organic oxime solution with the basic aqueous buffer just prior to being used in the detection process, oxime degradation can be avoided while preserving the original electrochemical detection scheme. Based on beaker cell experiments with selective cyanide sensitive electrodes, ethanol was chosen as the best organic solvent due to its stabilizing effect on the oxime, minimal interference with the aqueous electrochemistry, and compatibility with the current microsensor material (PMMA). Further studies showed that ethanol had a small effect on micro-sensor performance by reducing the rate of cyanide production and decreasing the overall response time. To avoid incomplete mixing of the aqueous and organic solutions, they were pre-mixed externally at a 10:1 ratio, respectively. To adapt the microsensor design to allow for mixing to take place within the device, a small serpentine channel component was fabricated with the same dimensions and material as the original sensor. This allowed for seamless integration of the microsensor with the serpentine mixing channel. Mixing in the serpentine microchannel takes place via diffusion. Both detector potential response and diffusional mixing improve with increased liquid residence time, and thus decreased liquid flowrate. Micromixer performance was studies at a 10:1 aqueous buffer to organic solution flow rate ratio, for a total rate of 5.5 μL/min. It was found that the sensor response utilizing the integrated micromixer was nearly identical to the response when the solutions were premixed and fed at the same rate.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Human gene therapy has faced many setbacks due to the immunogenicity and oncogenity of viruses. Safe and efficient alternative gene delivery vehicles are needed to implement gene therapy in clinical practice. Polymeric vectors are an attractive option due to their availability, simple chemistry, and low toxicity and immunogenicity. Our group has previously reported biodegradable polyethylenimines (PEI) that show high transfection efficiency and low toxicity by cross-linking 800 Da PEI with diacrylate cross-linkers using Michael addition. However, the synthesis was difficult to control, inconsistent, and resulted in polymers with a narrow range of molecular weights. In the present work, we utilized a heterogenous PVP(Fe(III)) catalyst to provide a more controllable PEI crosslinking reaction and wider range of biodegradable PEIs. The biodegradable PEIs reported here have molecular weights ranging from 1.2 kDa to 48 kDa, are nontoxic in MDA-MB-231 cells, and show low toxicity in HeLa cells. At their respective optimal polymer:DNA ratios, these biodegradable PEIs demonstrated about 2-5-fold higher transfection efficiency and 2-7-fold higher cellular uptake, compared unmodified 25 kDa PEI. The biodegradable PEIs show similar DNA condensation properties as unmodified PEI but more readily unpackage DNA, based on ethidium bromide exclusion and heparan sulfate competitive displacement assays, which could contribute to their improved transfection efficiency. Overall, the synthesis reported here provides a more robust, controlled reaction to produce cross-linked biodegradable PEIs that show enhanced gene delivery, low toxicity, and high cellular uptake and can potentially be used for future in vivo studies.