2 resultados para heterogeneous catalyst
em Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship Repository
Resumo:
We build a system to support search and visualization on heterogeneous information networks. We first build our system on a specialized heterogeneous information network: DBLP. The system aims to facilitate people, especially computer science researchers, toward a better understanding and user experience about academic information networks. Then we extend our system to the Web. Our results are much more intuitive and knowledgeable than the simple top-k blue links from traditional search engines, and bring more meaningful structural results with correlated entities. We also investigate the ranking algorithm, and we show that the personalized PageRank and proposed Hetero-personalized PageRank outperform the TF-IDF ranking or mixture of TF-IDF and authority ranking. Our work opens several directions for future research.
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.