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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(8): 6726-6735, 2024 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38323484

ABSTRACT

The nanoscale organization of electrolyte solutions at interfaces is often described well by the electrical double-layer model. However, a recent study has shown that this model breaks down in solutions of LiClO4 in acetonitrile at a silica interface, because the interface imposes a strong structuring in the solvent that in turn determines the preferred locations of cations and anions. As a surprising consequence of this organisation, the effective surface potential changes from negative at low electrolyte concentration to positive at high electrolyte concentration. Here we combine previous ion-current measurements with vibrational sum-frequency-generation spectroscopy experiments and molecular dynamics simulations to explore how the localization of ions at the acetonitrile-silica interface depends on the sizes of the anions and cations. We observe a strong, synergistic effect of the cation and anion identities that can prompt a large difference in the ability of ions to partition to the silica surface, and thereby influence the effective surface potential. Our results have implications for a wide range of applications that involve electrolyte solutions in polar aprotic solvents at nanoscale interfaces.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(2): 1462-1464, 2024 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38095231

ABSTRACT

Correction for 'Extracting accurate information from triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion data with a mass-conserving kinetic model' by Abhishek Kalpattu et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022, 24, 28174-28190, https://doi.org/10.1039/D2CP03986A.

3.
Faraday Discuss ; 246(0): 508-519, 2023 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37427451

ABSTRACT

The development of modern membranes for ionic separations and energy-storage devices such as supercapacitors depends on the description of ions at solid interfaces, as is often provided by the electrical double layer (EDL) model. The classical EDL model ignores, however, important factors such as possible spatial organization of solvent at the interface and the influence of the solvent on the spatial dependence of the electrochemical potential; these effects in turn govern electrokinetic phenomena. Here we provide a molecular-level understanding of how solvent structure can dictate ionic distributions at interfaces using a model system of a polar, aprotic solvent, propylene carbonate, in its enantiomerically pure and racemic forms, at a silica interface. We link the interfacial structure to the tuning of ionic and fluid transport by the chirality of the solvent and the salt concentration. The results of nonlinear spectroscopic experiments and electrochemical measurements suggest that the solvent exhibits lipid-bilayer-like interfacial organization, with a structure that is dependent on the solvent chirality. The racemic form creates highly ordered layered structure that dictates local ionic concentrations, such that the effective surface potential becomes positive in a wide range of electrolyte concentrations. The enantiomerically pure form exhibits weaker ordering at the silica surface, which leads to a lower effective surface charge induced by ions partitioning into the layered structure. The surface charge in silicon nitride and polymer pores is probed through the direction of electroosmosis that the surface charges induce. Our findings add a new dimension to the nascent field of chiral electrochemistry, and emphasize the importance of including solvent molecules in descriptions of solid-liquid interfaces.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(19): e2218906120, 2023 05 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37126708

ABSTRACT

Cellular sensing of most environmental cues involves receptors that affect a signal-transduction excitable network (STEN), which is coupled to a cytoskeletal excitable network (CEN). We show that the mechanism of sensing of nanoridges is fundamentally different. CEN activity occurs preferentially on nanoridges, whereas STEN activity is constrained between nanoridges. In the absence of STEN, waves disappear, but long-lasting F-actin puncta persist along the ridges. When CEN is suppressed, wave propagation is no longer constrained by nanoridges. A computational model reproduces these experimental observations. Our findings indicate that nanotopography is sensed directly by CEN, whereas STEN is only indirectly affected due to a CEN-STEN feedback loop. These results explain why texture sensing is robust and acts cooperatively with multiple other guidance cues in complex, in vivo microenvironments.


Subject(s)
Actin Cytoskeleton , Cytoskeleton , Cell Movement , Actins , Microtubules
5.
Chem Rev ; 123(6): 2737-2831, 2023 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36898130

ABSTRACT

Confined fluids and electrolyte solutions in nanopores exhibit rich and surprising physics and chemistry that impact the mass transport and energy efficiency in many important natural systems and industrial applications. Existing theories often fail to predict the exotic effects observed in the narrowest of such pores, called single-digit nanopores (SDNs), which have diameters or conduit widths of less than 10 nm, and have only recently become accessible for experimental measurements. What SDNs reveal has been surprising, including a rapidly increasing number of examples such as extraordinarily fast water transport, distorted fluid-phase boundaries, strong ion-correlation and quantum effects, and dielectric anomalies that are not observed in larger pores. Exploiting these effects presents myriad opportunities in both basic and applied research that stand to impact a host of new technologies at the water-energy nexus, from new membranes for precise separations and water purification to new gas permeable materials for water electrolyzers and energy-storage devices. SDNs also present unique opportunities to achieve ultrasensitive and selective chemical sensing at the single-ion and single-molecule limit. In this review article, we summarize the progress on nanofluidics of SDNs, with a focus on the confinement effects that arise in these extremely narrow nanopores. The recent development of precision model systems, transformative experimental tools, and multiscale theories that have played enabling roles in advancing this frontier are reviewed. We also identify new knowledge gaps in our understanding of nanofluidic transport and provide an outlook for the future challenges and opportunities at this rapidly advancing frontier.

6.
Environ Res ; 230: 115353, 2023 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36702187

ABSTRACT

We investigate how the geometry of elongate mineral particles (EMPs) in contact with cells influences esotaxis, a recently discovered mechanism of texture sensing. Esotaxis is based on cytoskeletal waves and oscillations that are nucleated, shaped, and steered by the texture of the surroundings. We find that all EMPs studied trigger an esotactic response in macrophages, and that this response dominates cytoskeletal activity in these immune cells. In contrast, epithelial cells show little to no esotactic response to the EMPs. These results are consistent with the distinct interactions of both cell types with ridged nanotopographies of dimensions comparable to those of asbestiform EMPs. Our findings raise the question of whether narrow, asbestiform EMPs may also dominate cytoskeletal activity in other types of immune cells that exhibit similar esotactic effects. These findings, together with prior studies of esotaxis, lead us to the hypothesis that asbestiform EMPs suppress the migration of immune cells and activate immune signaling, thereby outcompeting signals that would normally stimulate the immune system in nearby tissue.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants, Occupational , Particulate Matter , Particulate Matter/toxicity , Particulate Matter/analysis , Minerals/toxicity , Minerals/analysis
7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(46): 28174-28190, 2022 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36399042

ABSTRACT

Triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) is a process that shows promise for applications such as energy-harvesting and light-generation technologies. The irradiance dependent performance of TTA-UC systems is typically gauged using a graphical analysis, rather than a detailed model. Additionally, kinetic models for TTA-UC rarely incorporate mass conservation, which is a phenomenon that can have important consequences under experimentally relevant conditions. We present an analytical, mass-conserving kinetic model for TTA-UC, and demonstrate that the mass-conservation constraint cannot generally be ignored. This model accounts for saturation in TTA-UC data. Saturation complicates the interpretation of the threshold irradiance Ith, a popular performance metric. We propose two alternative figures of merit for overall performance. Finally, we show that our model can robustly fit experimental data from a wide variety of sensitized TTA-UC systems, enabling the direct and accurate determination of Ith and of our proposed performance metrics. We employ this fitting procedure to benchmark and compare these metrics, using data from the literature.

8.
Mol Biol Cell ; 33(10): ar88, 2022 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35830602

ABSTRACT

Exposure to MHC-antigen complexes on the surface of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) activates T cells, inducing the formation of the immune synapse (IS). Antigen detection at the APC surface is thus a critical step in the adaptive immune response. The physical properties of antigen-presenting surfaces encountered by T cells in vivo are believed to modulate T cell activation and proliferation. Although stiffness and ligand mobility influence IS formation, the effect of the complex topography of the APC surface on this process is not well understood. Here we investigate how nanotopography modulates cytoskeletal dynamics and signaling during the early stages of T cell activation using high-resolution fluorescence microscopy on nanofabricated surfaces with parallel nanoridges of different spacings. We find that although nanoridges reduce the maximum spread area as compared with cells on flat surfaces, the ridges enhance the accumulation of actin and the signaling kinase ZAP-70 at the IS. Actin polymerization is more dynamic in the presence of ridges, which influence the directionality of both actin flows and microtubule (MT) growth. Our results demonstrate that the topography of the activating surface exerts both global effects on T cell morphology and local changes in actin and MT dynamics, collectively influencing T cell signaling.


Subject(s)
Actins , Lymphocyte Activation , Actins/metabolism , Antigen-Presenting Cells/metabolism , Cytoskeleton/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism
9.
Front Cell Dev Biol ; 10: 873567, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35573675

ABSTRACT

Migrating cells must integrate multiple, competing external guidance cues. However, it is not well understood how cells prioritize among these cues. We investigate external cue integration by monitoring the response of wave-like, actin-polymerization dynamics, the driver of cell motility, to combinations of nanotopographies and electric fields in neutrophil-like cells. The electric fields provide a global guidance cue, and approximate conditions at wound sites in vivo. The nanotopographies have dimensions similar to those of collagen fibers, and act as a local esotactic guidance cue. We find that cells prioritize guidance cues, with electric fields dominating long-term motility by introducing a unidirectional bias in the locations at which actin waves nucleate. That bias competes successfully with the wave guidance provided by the bidirectional nanotopographies.

10.
Elife ; 112022 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35318938

ABSTRACT

Electrotaxis, the directional migration of cells in a constant electric field, is important in regeneration, development, and wound healing. Electrotaxis has a slower response and a smaller dynamic range than guidance by other cues, suggesting that the mechanism of electrotaxis shares both similarities and differences with chemical-gradient-sensing pathways. We examine a mechanism centered on the excitable system consisting of cortical waves of biochemical signals coupled to cytoskeletal reorganization, which has been implicated in random cell motility. We use electro-fused giant Dictyostelium discoideum cells to decouple waves from cell motion and employ nanotopographic surfaces to limit wave dimensions and lifetimes. We demonstrate that wave propagation in these cells is guided by electric fields. The wave area and lifetime gradually increase in the first 10 min after an electric field is turned on, leading to more abundant and wider protrusions in the cell region nearest the cathode. The wave directions display 'U-turn' behavior upon field reversal, and this switch occurs more quickly on nanotopography. Our results suggest that electric fields guide cells by controlling waves of signal transduction and cytoskeletal activity, which underlie cellular protrusions. Whereas surface receptor occupancy triggers both rapid activation and slower polarization of signaling pathways, electric fields appear to act primarily on polarization, explaining why cells respond to electric fields more slowly than to other guidance cues.


Subject(s)
Dictyostelium , Cell Movement/physiology , Dictyostelium/physiology , Electricity , Signal Transduction , Wound Healing
11.
iScience ; 25(1): 103600, 2022 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35005547

ABSTRACT

We introduce techniques for probing the dynamics of triplet states. We employ these tools, along with conventional techniques, to develop a detailed understanding of a complex chemical system: a negative-tone, radical photoresist for multiphoton absorption polymerization in which isopropylthioxanthone (ITX) is the photoinitiator. This work reveals that the same color of light used for the 2-photon excitation of ITX, leading to population of the triplet manifold through intersystem crossing, also depletes this triplet population via linear absorption followed by reverse intersystem crossing (RISC). Using spectroscopic tools and kinetic modeling, we identify the reactive triplet state and a non-reactive reservoir triplet state. We present compelling evidence that the deactivation channel involves RISC from an excited triplet state to a highly vibrationally excited level of the electronic ground state. The work described here offers the enticing possibility of understanding, and ultimately controlling, the photochemistry and photophysics of a broad range of triplet processes.

12.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 16(8): 902-910, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33972758

ABSTRACT

Metallic zinc is an ideal anode due to its high theoretical capacity (820 mAh g-1), low redox potential (-0.762 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode), high abundance and low toxicity. When used in aqueous electrolyte, it also brings intrinsic safety, but suffers from severe irreversibility. This is best exemplified by low coulombic efficiency, dendrite growth and water consumption. This is thought to be due to severe hydrogen evolution during zinc plating and stripping, hitherto making the in-situ formation of a solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) impossible. Here, we report an aqueous zinc battery in which a dilute and acidic aqueous electrolyte with an alkylammonium salt additive assists the formation of a robust, Zn2+-conducting and waterproof SEI. The presence of this SEI enables excellent performance: dendrite-free zinc plating/stripping at 99.9% coulombic efficiency in a Ti||Zn asymmetric cell for 1,000 cycles; steady charge-discharge in a Zn||Zn symmetric cell for 6,000 cycles (6,000 h); and high energy densities (136 Wh kg-1 in a Zn||VOPO4 full battery with 88.7% retention for >6,000 cycles, 325 Wh kg-1 in a Zn||O2 full battery for >300 cycles and 218 Wh kg-1 in a Zn||MnO2 full battery with 88.5% retention for 1,000 cycles) using limited zinc. The SEI-forming electrolyte also allows the reversible operation of an anode-free pouch cell of Ti||ZnxVOPO4 at 100% depth of discharge for 100 cycles, thus establishing aqueous zinc batteries as viable cell systems for practical applications.

13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(22)2021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34031242

ABSTRACT

Contact guidance is a powerful topographical cue that induces persistent directional cell migration. Healthy tissue stroma is characterized by a meshwork of wavy extracellular matrix (ECM) fiber bundles, whereas metastasis-prone stroma exhibit less wavy, more linear fibers. The latter topography correlates with poor prognosis, whereas more wavy bundles correlate with benign tumors. We designed nanotopographic ECM-coated substrates that mimic collagen fibril waveforms seen in tumors and healthy tissues to determine how these nanotopographies may regulate cancer cell polarization and migration machineries. Cell polarization and directional migration were inhibited by fibril-like wave substrates above a threshold amplitude. Although polarity signals and actin nucleation factors were required for polarization and migration on low-amplitude wave substrates, they did not localize to cell leading edges. Instead, these factors localized to wave peaks, creating multiple "cryptic leading edges" within cells. On high-amplitude wave substrates, retrograde flow from large cryptic leading edges depolarized stress fibers and focal adhesions and inhibited cell migration. On low-amplitude wave substrates, actomyosin contractility overrode the small cryptic leading edges and drove stress fiber and focal adhesion orientation along the wave axis to mediate directional migration. Cancer cells of different intrinsic contractility depolarized at different wave amplitudes, and cell polarization response to wavy substrates could be tuned by manipulating contractility. We propose that ECM fibril waveforms with sufficiently high amplitude around tumors may serve as "cell polarization barriers," decreasing directional migration of tumor cells, which could be overcome by up-regulation of tumor cell contractility.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Extracellular Matrix/pathology , Focal Adhesions , Neoplasm Metastasis , Neoplasms/pathology , Stress Fibers/pathology , Humans
14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(41): 17282-17286, 2020 Oct 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32985879

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticle (NP) clusters are attractive for many applications, but controllable and regioselective assembly of clusters remains challenging. This communication reports a strategy to precisely assemble Ag nanoplates (NP-As) and Au nanospheres (NP-Bs) grafted with copolymer ligands into defined ABx clusters with controlled coordination number (x) and orientation of the NPs. The directional bonding of shaped NPs relies on the stoichiometric reaction of complementary reactive groups on copolymer ligands. The x value of NP clusters can be tuned from 1 to 4 by varying the number ratio of reactive groups on single NP-Bs to NP-As. The regioselective bonding of nanospheres to the edge or face of a central nanoplate is governed by the steric hindrance of copolymeric ligands on the nanoplate. The clusters exhibit distinctive plasmonic properties that are dependent on the bonding modes of NPs. This study paves a route to fabricating nanostructures with high precision and complexity for applications in plasmonics, catalysis, and sensing.

15.
Mol Biol Cell ; 31(16): 1753-1764, 2020 07 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32023172

ABSTRACT

The dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton is an essential component of many mechanotransduction and cellular force generation pathways. Here we use periodic surface topographies with feature sizes comparable to those of in vivo collagen fibers to measure and compare actin dynamics for two representative cell types that have markedly different migratory modes and physiological purposes: slowly migrating epithelial MCF10A cells and polarizing, fast-migrating, neutrophil-like HL60 cells. Both cell types exhibit reproducible guidance of actin waves (esotaxis) on these topographies, enabling quantitative comparisons of actin dynamics. We adapt a computer-vision algorithm, optical flow, to measure the directions of actin waves at the submicron scale. Clustering the optical flow into regions that move in similar directions enables micron-scale measurements of actin-wave speed and direction. Although the speed and morphology of actin waves differ between MCF10A and HL60 cells, the underlying actin guidance by nanotopography is similar in both cell types at the micron and submicron scales.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Cell Movement/physiology , Mechanotransduction, Cellular/physiology , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Actins/physiology , Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Cytoskeleton/physiology , Epithelial Cells/physiology , HL-60 Cells/physiology , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Mechanical Phenomena , Models, Biological
18.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(33): 7314-7322, 2019 Aug 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31352785

ABSTRACT

Two-beam action (2-BA) spectroscopies are a recently developed class of techniques for determining the order(s) of absorption (one-photon, two-photon, etc.) that contribute to an observable signal. When only a single order of absorption is present, 2-BA spectroscopies allow for the determination of that order from data obtained at a single value of the observable. It has been shown previously that when two orders of absorption are present, they can be determined unambiguously from measurements made at several values of the observable. However, this latter approach cannot be used for single-valued observables, such as a polymerization threshold. Here we develop a theoretical comparison between conventional methods that determine the order(s) of absorption using logarithmic plots and 2-BA-based techniques. We also explore how 2-BA plots arising from two orders of absorption deviate from a plot with a single, noninteger exponent. We demonstrate that these deviations can usually be used to identify the two orders of absorption and their relative contributions to the signal on the basis of measurements made at a single value of the observable.

19.
ACS Nano ; 13(2): 1454-1468, 2019 02 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30707556

ABSTRACT

Physical guidance from the underlying matrix is a key regulator of cancer invasion and metastasis. We explore the effects of surface topography on the migration phenotype of multiple breast cancer cell lines using aligned nanoscale ridges and asymmetric sawtooth structures. Both benign and metastatic breast cancer cells preferentially move parallel to nanoridges, with enhanced speeds compared to flat surfaces. In contrast, asymmetric sawtooth structures unidirectionally bias the movement of breast cancer cells in a cell-type-dependent manner. Quantitative analysis shows that the level of bias in cell migration increases when cells move with higher speeds or with higher directional persistence. Live-cell imaging studies further reveal that actin polymerization waves are unidirectionally guided by the sawteeth in the same direction as the cell motion. High-resolution fluorescence imaging and scanning electron microscopy studies reveal that two breast cancer cell lines with opposite migrational profiles exhibit profoundly different cell cortical plasticity and focal adhesion patterns. These results suggest that the overall migration response of cancer cells to surface topography is directly related to the underlying cytoskeletal architectures and dynamics, which are regulated by both intrinsic and extrinsic factors.


Subject(s)
Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Cell Movement/physiology , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Movement/genetics , Female , Focal Adhesions/metabolism , Focal Adhesions/ultrastructure , Humans , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
20.
J Phys Chem A ; 122(32): 6643-6653, 2018 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30022666

ABSTRACT

Multiphoton absorption (MPA) is an enabling technology for many applications. However, due to the low probability of MPA processes, their accurate characterization remains a challenge. Here we introduce a new technique, two-beam constant emission intensity (2-BCEIn) spectroscopy, that offers substantial advantages over other existing methods that use the generation of optical emission for the characterization of absorptive nonlinearities. We use 2-BCEIn to study nonlinear absorption in solutions of crystal violet lactone (CVL) over a range of excitation wavelengths in which the dominant nonlinear absorption process transitions from two-photon absorption (750 nm) to three-photon absorption (830 nm). At an excitation wavelength of 800 nm, both two-photon absorption and three-photon absorption contribute substantially to the nonlinear fluorescence excitation (NFE) signal, although the dynamic range of the NFE data is not sufficient to quantify the contributions of each process. 2-BCEIn spectroscopy enables the direct measurement of the local exponent at each emission intensity. 2-BCEIn measurements made at several different emission intensities demonstrate unambiguously that the nonlinear excitation of CVL at 800 nm cannot be described solely as the sum of a two-photon process and a three-photon process. A kinetic model that includes intrapulse excited-state absorption reproduces the features of the 2-BCEIn measurements and enables the determination of the ratio of the three-photon absorption cross section to the two-photon absorption cross section. Such information cannot easily be extracted from conventional NFE measurements. These results demonstrate the power and versatility of two-beam action spectroscopies for elucidating the complex photophysics of multiphoton absorption processes.

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