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Milad Radiom

ETH Zurich

ORCID: 0000-0002-6339-9288

Publishes on Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications, Mechanical and Optical Resonators, Polymer Surface Interaction Studies. 80 papers and 879 citations.

80Publications
879Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Food amyloid fibrils are safe nutrition ingredients based on in-vitro and in-vivo assessment
Dan Xu, Jiangtao Zhou, Wei Long Soon et al.|Nature Communications|2023
Cited by 128Open Access

Food protein amyloid fibrils have superior technological, nutritional, sensorial, and physical properties compared to native monomers, but there is as yet insufficient understanding of their digestive fate and safety for wide consumption. By combining SDS-PAGE, ELISA, fluorescence, AFM, MALDI-MS, CD, microfluidics, and SAXS techniques for the characterization of β-lactoglobulin and lysozyme amyloid fibrils subjected to in-vitro gastrointestinal digestion, here we show that either no noticeable conformational differences exist between amyloid aggregates and their monomer counterparts after the gastrointestinal digestion process (as in β-lactoglobulin), or that amyloid fibrils are digested significantly better than monomers (as in lysozyme). Moreover, in-vitro exposure of human cell lines and in-vivo studies with C. elegans and mouse models, indicate that the digested fibrils present no observable cytotoxicity, physiological abnormalities in health-span, nor accumulation of fibril-induced plaques in brain nor other organs. These extensive in-vitro and in-vivo studies together suggest that the digested food amyloids are at least equally as safe as those obtained from the digestion of corresponding native monomers, pointing to food amyloid fibrils as potential ingredients for human nutrition.

Pulmonary surfactant inhibition of nanoparticle uptake by alveolar epithelial cells
Milad Radiom, Matthieu Sarkis, Oliver Brookes et al.|arXiv (Cornell University)|2020
Cited by 70Open Access

Pulmonary surfactant forms a sub-micrometer thick fluid layer that covers the surface of alveolar lumen and inhaled nanoparticles therefore come in to contact with surfactant prior to any interaction with epithelial cells. We investigate the role of the surfactant as a protective physical barrier by modeling the interactions using silica-Curosurf-alveolar epithelial cell system in vitro. Electron microscopy displays that the vesicles are preserved in the presence of nanoparticles while nanoparticle-lipid interaction leads to the formation of mixed aggregates. Fluorescence microscopy reveals that the surfactant decreases the uptake of nanoparticles by up to two orders of magnitude in two models of alveolar epithelial cells, A549 and NCI-H441, irrespective of immersed culture on glass or air-liquid interface culture on transwell. Confocal microscopy corroborates the results by showing nanoparticle-lipid colocalization interacting with the cells. Our work thus supports the idea that pulmonary surfactant plays a protective role against inhaled nanoparticles. The effect of surfactant should therefore be considered in predictive assessment of nanoparticle toxicity or drug nanocarrier uptake. Models based on the one presented in this work may be used for preclinical tests with engineered nanoparticles.

Interfacial structuring of non-halogenated imidazolium ionic liquids at charged surfaces: effect of alkyl chain length
Seiya Watanabe, Georgia A. Pilkington, Аnna Oleshkevych et al.|Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics|2020
Cited by 56Open Access

Control of the interfacial structures of ionic liquids (ILs) at charged interfaces is important to many of their applications, including in energy storage solutions, sensors and advanced lubrication technologies utilising electric fields. In the case of the latter, there is an increasing demand for the study of non-halogenated ILs, as many fluorinated anions have been found to produce corrosive and toxic halides under tribological conditions. Here, the interfacial structuring of a series of four imidazolium ILs ([CnC1Im]) of varying alkyl chain lengths (n = 5, 6, 7, 10), with a non-halogenated borate-based anion ([BOB]), have been studied at charged interfaces using sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy and neutron reflectivity (NR). For all alkyl chain lengths, the SFG spectra show that the cation imidazolium ring responds to the surface charge by modifying its orientation with respect to the surface normal. In addition, the combination of SFG spectra with electrochemical NR measurements reveals that the longest alkyl chain length (n = 10) forms a bilayer structure at all charged interfaces, independent of the ring orientation. These results demonstrate the tunability of IL interfacial layers through the use of surface charge, as well as effect of the cation alkyl chain length, and provide valuable insight into the charge compensation mechanisms of ILs.

Characterization of surface tension and contact angle of nanofluids
Milad Radiom, Chun Yang, Weng Kong Chan|Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE|2009
Cited by 53

This paper investigates the effects of nanoparticles on surface tension and equilibrium contact angle of TiO<sub>2</sub> - DI water nanofluids. Experimental measurements of surface tension by using the pendant droplet method show that the surface tension of the TiO<sub>2</sub> - DI water nanofluids depends weakly on nanoparticle concentration; however, at higher nanoparticle concentrations the surface tension is lower. Various mechanisms are reported to explain this behavior. Experimental measurements of contact angles of the TiO<sub>2</sub> - DI water nanofluids droplets on borosilicate glass slides exhibit strong nanoparticle dependence, and the general trend is increment of the contact angles with nanoparticle concentration. The effect from the so-called disjoining pressure due to the presence of nanoparticles within the thin nanofluid film wedge at the vicinity of the three-phase contact line is examined. However, the phenomenon is attributed to the pinning of contact line and local changes in solid-liquid interfacial tension due to the depositing of nanoparticles on adsorption sites on solid surface.

Phase-separating peptide coacervates with programmable material properties for universal intracellular delivery of macromolecules
Yue Sun, Xi Wu, Jianguo Li et al.|Nature Communications|2024
Cited by 51Open Access

Phase-separating peptides (PSPs) self-assembling into coacervate microdroplets (CMs) are a promising class of intracellular delivery vehicles that can release macromolecular modalities deployed in a wide range of therapeutic treatments. However, the molecular grammar governing intracellular uptake and release kinetics of CMs remains elusive. Here, we systematically manipulate the sequence of PSPs to unravel the relationships between their molecular structure, the physical properties of the resulting CMs, and their delivery efficacy. We show that a few amino acid alterations are sufficient to modulate the viscoelastic properties of CMs towards either a gel-like or a liquid-like state as well as their binding interaction with cellular membranes, collectively enabling to tune the kinetics of intracellular cargo release. We also demonstrate that the optimized PSPs CMs display excellent transfection efficiency in hard-to-transfect cells such as primary fibroblasts and immune cells. Our findings provide molecular guidelines to precisely program the material properties of PSP CMs and achieve tunable cellular uptake and release kinetics depending on the cargo modality, with broad implications for therapeutic applications such as protein, gene, and immune cell therapies. Phase-separating peptide (PSP) coacervate microdroplets (CMs) have emerged as promising intracellular delivery vectors, but the molecular grammar governing intracellular uptake and release kinetics of CMs is elusive. Here, the authors systematically manipulate the sequence of PSPs to establish molecular guidelines for designing and optimizing PSP CM-based intracellular delivery systems.