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Red blood cells (RBCs) are attractive carriers of biomolecular payloads due to their biocompatibility and the ability to shelter their encapsulated cargo. Commonly employed strategies to encapsulate payloads into RBCs, such as hypotonic shock, membrane fusion or electroporation, often suffer from low throughput and unrecoverable membrane impairment. This work describes an investigation of a method to encapsulate protein payloads into RBCs by controlling membrane deformation either transiently or extendedly in a microfluidic channel. Under the optimized conditions, the loading efficiency of enhanced green fluorescent protein into mouse RBCs increased was about 2.5- and 4-fold compared to that with osmotic entrapment using transient and extended deformation, respectively. Significantly, mouse RBCs loaded with human arginase exhibit higher enzymatic activity and membrane integrity compared to their counterparts loaded by osmotic entrapment. These features together with the fact that this shear-mediated encapsulation strategy allows loading with physiological buffers highlight the key advantages of this approach compared to traditional osmotic entrapment.Glycosylation is a widely occurring posttranslational modification. Here, we applied a quick, convenient and high-throughput strategy (lectin array) to investigate the variation in glycans on different macrophage subtypes derived from THP-1 and RAW264.7 cells. For THP-1 cells, there were more significant differences in the glycan on M2 macrophages compared to the other two subtypes. In contrast, M1 macrophages exhibited more significant glycan remodeling than the other subtypes for the RAW264.7 cell line. The response of the lectins which recogonize the N-glycan and α2,6 sialic acid was higher during polarization into anti-inflammatory phase (THP-1 derived M2 subtypes), and lower in pro-inflammatory phase (RAW264.7 M1 subtypes). The regulation of several α2,6 sialyltransferase genes was coincident with the regulation of the α2,6 sialic acid on the two cell lines. The lectin response and glycosyltranferase gene expression confirmed that α2,6 sialic acid showed higher expression in the anti-inflammatory phase. This indicated that α2,6 sialic acid was a potential indicator for the anti-inflammatory response.Electrical control of magnetism has great potential for low-power spintronics applications and the newly discovered two-dimensional van der Waals magnetic materials are promising systems for this type of applications. In fact, it has been recently shown experimentally (Jiang et al., Nat. Nanotechnol., 2018, 13, 549-553) that upon electrostatic doping by electrons bilayer CrI3 undergoes an antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic (AFM-FM) phase transition, even in the absence of magnetic field. Doping by holes, on the other hand, does not induce the same transition in the experiment, which points to an intrinsic asymmetry in the hole and electron doping that limits the control of the transition by doping. We here show, based on first-principles calculations, that the asymmetry originates in the relativistic nature of the valence-band-edge states of the pristine bilayer, which inhibits the magnetic transition upon hole doping. Based on this finding, we propose an approach to overcome the asymmetry and predict the existence of the AFM-FM transition for both hole and electron doping upon moderate uniaxial compression along the soft direction of the bilayer.In this work, nanoclusters (NCs) of Cu and Ag capped with hyperbranched polyethyleneimine (PEI) were prepared using chemical reduction by a one-step hydrothermal method. The PEI coated-NCs were characterized by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, ζ potential, thermogravimetric analysis, dynamic light scattering, Fourier-transform infrared, UV-visible, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The PEI-NCs exhibited strong absorption and fluorescence, high stability, and excellent water dispersibility. The resulting PEI-NCs showed a reversible and linear response of fluorescence intensity with pH over a wide range (3-11); however, PEI-AgNCs showed a better reversibility and sensitivity than PEI-CuNCs. Unlike several types of pH sensors based on modified NCs, which are based on a nanoparticle aggregation/disaggregation mechanism, the response of our sensor is based on a photoinduced electron transfer process, which gives it a high reversibility. A674563 This method was successfully applied in pH measurements in tap water and green tea samples, with excellent results, indicating its practical utility for these applications. A visual device was obtained by immobilizing PEI-AgNCs into agarose hydrogels at different pH values. The results show that the proposed sensor can be used as a pH visual detector. Besides, the light emission of the nanosensor was corroborated by fluorescence microscopy, confirming that the nanosensor based on PEI-AgNCs has great potential to be used in cellular imaging.A mononuclear ruthenium(ii), [(L1IQ)Ru2+(PPh3)2Cl2]·CHCl3 (1·CHCl3), a di-ruthenium(ii,ii), [(L2IQ)2Ru24+Cl4(PPh3)2] (2) and a mixed-valence di-ruthenium(ii,iii), [(L3IQ)Ru25+Cl5(PPh3)2]·MeOH (3·MeOH) complex, where L1IQ, L2IQ and L3IQ are, respectively, o-diiminobenzoquinone forms of redox non-innocent N-(5-nitropyridyl)-o-phenylenediamine (L1H2), N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)-o-phenylenediamine (L2H2) and N-(3-nitropyridyl)-o-phenylenediamine (L3H2) derivatives, were successfully isolated. The molecular and electronic structures of 1·CHCl3, 2 and 3·MeOH were confirmed by single-crystal X-ray crystallography, EPR, UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopies and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Both 1·CHCl3 and 2 exhibited reversible anodic waves due to the Ru(iii)/Ru(ii) redox couple, while the cyclic voltammogram of 3·MeOH displayed two successive cathodic waves due to ruthenium(iii)/ruthenium(ii) and (L3IQ/L3ISQ) redox couples. EPR spectroscopy and DFT calculations inferred that 1+ is a ruthenium(iii) complex of L1IQ, respectively, were 62 and 103 cm-1, defining these as Robin-Day class II mixed-valence systems.Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) and arylazopyrazole (AAP) mixtures can be remotely controlled by light and temperature. We show that the hydrophobic interactions between HPC polymers with AAP surfactants can be drastically changed by changing the surfactants configuration through E/Z photo-isomerization. E-AAP interacts strongly with HPC which causes a dramatic increase of the critical temperature Tc of the polymers' phase transition and a loss of the coil-to-globule transition, while the hydrophobic interactions of HPC with Z-AAP are drastically reduced. As a result, E/Z photo-isomerization of AAP in mixtures with HPC offers remote control of the polymers phase transition, size and solution viscosity in an unprecedented way, and allows for new directions in colloid science.

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