Publications

Sort by: Author Title [ Type  (Asc)] Year
Conference Proceedings
Baptista, P., G. Doria, A. Matias, L. Osorio, E. Pereira, and F. Ricardo. Direct detection of mutations/SNPs using DNA-derivatised gold nanoparticles In Congress of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine. Jena, Germany, 2005.
Journal Article
Conde, João, Alfredo Ambrosone, Yulán Hernandez, Furong Tian, Mark McCully, Catherine C. Berry, Pedro V. Baptista, and Claudia T. " 15 years on siRNA delivery: Beyond the State-of-the-Art on inorganic nanoparticles for RNAi therapeutics." NANO TODAY In Press (2015). Abstract

RNAi has always captivated scientists due to its tremendous power to modulate the phenotype of living organisms. This natural and powerful biological mechanism can now be harnessed to down-regulate specific gene expression in diseased cells; opening up endless opportunities. Since most of the conventional siRNA delivery methods are limited by a narrow therapeutic index and significant side and off-target effects, we are now in the dawn of a new age in gene therapy driven by nanotechnology vehicles for RNAi therapeutics. Here, we outlook the "do's and dont's" of the inorganic RNAi nanomaterials developed in the last 15 years and the different strategies employed are compared and scrutinized, offering important suggestions for the next 15.

Bernacka-Wojcik, Iwona, Susana Ribeiro, Pawel Jerzy Wojcik, Pedro Urbano Alves, Tito Busani, Elvira Fortunato, Pedro Viana Baptista, José António Covas, Hugo Águas, Loic Hilliou, and Rodrigo Martins. " Experimental optimization of a passive planar rhombic micromixer with obstacles for effective mixing in a short channel length." RSC ADVANCES 4 (2014). AbstractWebsite

This paper presents the performance of a passive planar rhombic micromixer with diamond-shaped obstacles and a rectangular contraction between the rhombi. The device was experimentally optimized using water for high mixing efficiency and a low pressure drop over a wide range of Reynolds numbers (Re = 0.1–117.6) by varying geometrical parameters such as the number of rhombi, the distance between obstacles and the contraction width. Due to the large amount of data generated, statistical methods were used to facilitate and improve the results of the analysis. The results revealed a rank of factors influencing mixing efficiency: Reynolds number > number of rhombi > contraction width > inter-obstacles distance. The pressure drop measured after three rhombi depends mainly on Re and inter-obstacle distance. The resulting optimum geometry for the low Re regime has a contraction width of 101 μm and inter-obstacles distance of 93 μm, while for the high Re regime a contraction width of 400 μm and inter-obstacle distance of 121 μm are more appropriate. These mixers enabled 80% mixing efficiency creating a pressure drop of 6.0 Pa at Re = 0.1 and 5.1 × 104 Pa at Re = 117.6, with a mixer length of 2.5 mm. To the authors' knowledge, the developed mixer is one of the shortest planar passive micromixers reported to date.

Carlos, F. F., B. Veigas, A. S. Matias, G. Doria, O. Flores, and P. V. Baptista. "Allele specific LAMP- gold nanoparticle for characterization of single nucleotide polymorphisms." Biotechnol Rep (Amst) 16 (2017): 21-25. AbstractWebsite

n/a

Martins, Rodrigo, Pedro Baptista, Leandro Raniero, Gonçalo Doria, Leonardo Silva, Ricardo Franco, and Elvira Fortunato. "Amorphous/nanocrystalline silicon biosensor for the specific identification of unamplified nucleic acid sequences using gold nanoparticle probes." Appl. Phys. Lett. 90 (2007).
Veigas, B., A. Matias, T. Calmeiro, E. Fortunato, A. R. Fernandes, and P. V. Baptista. "Antibody modified gold nanoparticles for fast colorimetric screening of rheumatoid arthritis." Analyst 144 (2019): 3613-3619. AbstractWebsite

n/a

Veigas, B., D. Machado, J. Perdigão, I. Portugal, I. Couto, M. Viveiros, and P. V. Baptista. "Au-nanoprobes for detection of SNPs associated with antibiotic resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis." Nanotechnology 21 (2010): 415101. AbstractWebsite

n/a

Bernacka-Wojcik, Iwona, Paulo Lopes, Ana Catarina Vaz, Bruno Veigas, Pawel Jerzy Wojcik, Pedro Simões, David Barata, Elvira Fortunato, Pedro V. Baptista, Hugo Águas, and Rodrigo Martins. "Bio-microfluidic platform for gold nanoprobe based DNA detection—application to Mycobacterium tuberculosis." Biosens Bioelectron 48 (2013): 87-93. AbstractWebsite

We have projected and fabricated a microfluidic platform for DNA sensing that makes use of an optical colorimetric detection method based on gold nanoparticles. The platform was fabricated using replica moulding technology in PDMS patterned by high-aspect-ratio SU-8 moulds. Biochips of various geometries were tested and evaluated in order to find out the most efficient architecture, and the rational for design, microfabrication and detection performance is presented. The best biochip configuration has been successfully applied to the DNA detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis using only 3 µl on DNA solution (i.e. 90 ng of target DNA), therefore a 20-fold reduction of reagents volume is obtained when compared with the actual state of the art.

Mendo, Ana Soraia, Sara Figueiredo, Catarina Roma-Rodrigues, Paula A. Videira, Zhen Ma, Mário Diniz, Miguel Larguinho, Pedro Costa, João C. Lima, Armando J. L. Pombeiro, Pedro V. Baptista, and Alexandra R. Fernandes. "Characterization of antiproliferative potential and biological targets of a copper compound containing 4'-phenyl terpyridine." JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry 2 (2015): 935-948. AbstractWebsite

Several copper complexes have been assessed as anti-tumor agents against cancer cells. In this work, a copper compound [Cu(H2O){OS(CH3)2}L](NO3)2 incorporating the ligand 4'-phenyl-terpyridine antiproliferative activity against human colorectal, hepatocellular carcinomas and breast adenocarcinoma cell lines was determined, demonstrating high cytotoxicity. The compound is able to induce apoptosis and a slight delay in cancer cell cycle progression, probably by its interaction with DNA and induction of double-strand pDNA cleavage, which is enhanced by oxidative mechanisms. Moreover, proteomic studies indicate that the compound induces alterations in proteins involved in cytoskeleton maintenance, cell cycle progression and apoptosis, corroborating its antiproliferative potential.

Pedrosa, Pedro, Rita Mendes, Rita Cabral, Luisa M. D. R. S. Martins, Pedro V. Baptista, and Alexandra R. Fernandes. "Combination of chemotherapy and Au-nanoparticle photothermy in the visible light to tackle doxorubicin resistance in cancer cells." Scientific Reports 8 (2018). Abstract

n/a

Machado, Diana, Isabel Couto, João Perdigão, Liliana Rodrigues, Isabel Portugal, Pedro Baptista, Bruno Veigas, Leonard Amaral, and Miguel Viveiros. "Contribution of efflux to the emergence of isoniazid and multidrug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis." PLoS ONE 7 (2012): e34538.
Conde, Joao, Alfredo Ambrosone, Vanesa Sanz, Yulan Hernandez, Valentina Marchesano, Furong Tian, Hannah Child, Catherine C. Berry, Ricardo M. Ibarra, Pedro V. Baptista, Claudia Tortiglione, and Jesus M. de la Fuente. "Design of Multifunctional Gold Nanoparticles for In Vitro and In Vivo Gene Silencing." Acs Nano 6 (2012): 8316-8324. Abstract

n/a

Conde, J., A. Ambrosone, Y. Hernandez, V. Marchesano, F. Tian, M. Ricardo Ibarra, P. V. Baptista, C. Tortiglione, and J. M. de la Fuente. "Designing gold nanoparticles for in vivo gene silencing as a new therapeutic tool." Human Gene Therapy 24 (2013): A24. Abstract

n/a

Coelho, Beatriz, Bruno Veigas, Elvira Fortunato, Rodrigo Martins, Hugo Aguas, Rui Igreja, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Digital Microfluidics for Nucleic Acid Amplification." Sensors 17 (2017). Abstract

n/a

Coelho, Beatriz Jorge, Bruno Veigas, Hugo Aguas, Elvira Fortunato, Rodrigo Martins, Pedro Viana Baptista, and Rui Igreja. "A Digital Microfluidics Platform for Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification Detection." Sensors 17 (2017). Abstract

n/a

Reimão-Pinto, M. M., A. Cordeiro, C. Almeida, A. V. Pinheiro, A. Moro, J. C. Lima, and P. V. Baptista. "Dual-color control of nucleotide polymerization sensed by a fluorescence actuator." Photochem Photobiol Sci 13 (2014): 751-6. AbstractWebsite

n/a

Ribeiro, A. P. C., S. Anbu, E. C. B. A. Alegria, A. R. Fernandes, P. V. Baptista, R. Mendes, A. S. Matias, M. Mendes, M. F. C. Guedes da Silva, and A. J. L. Pombeiro. "Evaluation of cell toxicity and DNA and protein binding of green synthesized silver nanoparticles." Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy 101 (2018): 137-144. AbstractWebsite

n/a

Bernacka-Wojcik, Iwona, Susana Ribeiro, Pawel Jerzy Wojcik, Pedro Urbano Alves, Tito Busani, Elvira Fortunato, Pedro Viana Baptista, Jose Antonio Covas, Hugo Aguas, Loic Hilliou, and Rodrigo Martins. "Experimental optimization of a passive planar rhombic micromixer with obstacles for effective mixing in a short channel length." Rsc Advances 4 (2014): 56013-56025. Abstract

n/a

Oliveira, B., B. Veigas, A. R. Fernandes, H. Águas, R. Martins, E. Fortunato, and P. V. Baptista. "Fast Prototyping Microfluidics: Integrating Droplet Digital Lamp for Absolute Quantification of Cancer Biomarkers." Sensors (Basel) 20 (2020). AbstractWebsite

n/a

Oliveira, Hélder, Catarina Roma-Rodrigues, Ana Santos, Bruno Veigas, Natércia Brás, Ana Faria, Conceição Calhau, Victor de Freitas, Pedro V. Baptista, Nuno Mateus, Alexandra R. Fernandes, and Iva Fernandes. "GLUT1 and GLUT3 involvement in anthocyanin gastric transport- Nanobased targeted approach." Scientific Reports 9 (2019): 789. AbstractWebsite

Anthocyanins may protect against a myriad of human diseases. However few studies have been conducted to evaluate their bioavailability so their absorption mechanism remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the role of two glucose transporters (GLUT1 and GLUT3) in anthocyanins absorption in the human gastric epithelial cells (MKN-28) by using gold nanoparticles to silence these transporters. Anthocyanins were purified from purple fleshed sweet potatoes and grape skin. Silencing of GLUT1 and/or GLUT3 mRNA was performed by adding AuNP@GLUT1 and/or AuNP@GLUT3 to MKN-28 cells. Downregulation of mRNA expression occurred concomitantly with the reduction in protein expression. Malvidin-3-O-glucoside (Mv3glc) transport was reduced in the presence of either AuNP@GLUT1 and AuNP@GLUT3, and when both transporters were blocked simultaneously. Peonidin-3-(6′-hydroxybenzoyl)-sophoroside-5-glucoside (Pn3HBsoph5glc) and Peonidin-3-(6′-hydroxybenzoyl-6″-caffeoyl)-sophoroside-5-glucoside (Pn3HBCsoph5glc) were assayed to verify the effect of the sugar moiety esterification at glucose B in transporter binding. Both pigments were transported with a lower transport efficiency compared to Mv3glc, probably due to steric hindrance of the more complex structures. Interestingly, for Pn3HBCsoph5glc although the only free glucose is at C5 and the inhibitory effect of the nanoparticles was also observed, reinforcing the importance of glucose on the transport regardless of its position or substitution pattern. The results support the involvement of GLUT1 and GLUT3 in the gastric absorption of anthocyanins.

Mendes, Rita, Alexandra R. Fernandes, and Pedro V. Baptista. "Gold Nanoparticle Approach to the Selective Delivery of Gene Silencing in Cancer—The Case for Combined Delivery?" Genes 3 (2017): 94. AbstractWebsite

Gene therapy arises as a great promise for cancer therapeutics due to its potential to silence genes involved in tumor development. In fact, there are some pivotal gene drivers that suffer critical alterations leading to cell transformation and ultimately to tumor growth. In this vein, gene silencing has been proposed as an active tool to selectively silence these molecular triggers of cancer, thus improving treatment. However, naked nucleic acid (DNA/RNA) sequences are reported to have a short lifetime in the body, promptly degraded by circulating enzymes, which in turn speed up elimination and decrease the therapeutic potential of these drugs. The use of nanoparticles for the effective delivery of these silencers to the specific target locations has allowed researchers to overcome this issue. Particularly, gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have been used as attractive vehicles for the target-specific delivery of gene-silencing moieties, alone or in combination with other drugs. We shall discuss current trends in AuNP-based delivery of gene-silencing tools, considering the promising road ahead without overlooking existing concerns for their translation to clinics

Guirgis, Bassem S. S., Claudia Sa e Cunha, Ines Gomes, Miguel Cavadas, Isabel Silva, Goncalo Doria, Gregory L. Blatch, Pedro V. Baptista, Eulalia Pereira, Hassan M. E. Azzazy, Maria M. Mota, Miguel Prudencio, and Ricardo Franco. "Gold nanoparticle-based fluorescence immunoassay for malaria antigen detection." Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 402 (2012): 1019-1027. Abstract

n/a

Vinhas, Raquel, Milton Cordeiro, Fábio Carlos, Soraia Mendo, Alexandra Fernandes, Sara Figueiredo, and Pedro Baptista. "Gold nanoparticle-based theranostics: disease diagnostics and treatment using a single nanomaterial." Journal of Nanobiosensors in Disease Diagnosis (2015): 11-23. AbstractWebsite

Nanotheranostics takes advantage of nanotechnology-based systems in order to diagnose and treat a specific disease. This approach is particularly relevant for personalized medicine, allowing the detection of a disease at an early stage, to direct a suitable therapy toward the target tissue based on the molecular profile of the altered phenotype, subsequently facilitating disease monitoring and following treatment. A tailored strategy also enables to reduce the off-target effects associated with universal treatments and improve the safety profile of a given treatment. The unique optical properties of gold nanoparticles, their ease of surface modification, and high surface-to-volume ratio have made them central players in this area. By combining imaging, targeting, and therapeutic agents in a single vehicle, these nanoconjugates are (ought to be) an important tool in the clinics. In this review, the multifunctionality of gold nanoparticles as theranostics agents will be highlighted, as well as the requirements before the translation of these nanoplatforms into routine clinical practice.

Child, Hannah Winifred, Yulan Hernandez, João Conde, Margaret Mullin, Pedro V. Baptista, Jesus Maria de la Fuente, and Catherine C. Berry. "Gold nanoparticle-siRNA mediated oncogene knockdown at RNA and protein level, with associated gene effects." NANOMEDICINE 10 (2015): 2513-2525. AbstractWebsite

Aims: RNAi is a powerful tool for gene silencing that can be used to reduce undesirable overexpression of oncogenes as a novel form of cancer treatment. However, when using RNAi as a therapeutic tool there is potential for associated gene effects. This study aimed to utilize gold nanoparticles to deliver siRNA into HeLa cells. Results: Knockdown of the c-myc oncogene by RNAi, at the RNA, protein and cell proliferation level was achieved, while also identifying associated gene responses. Discussion: The gold nanoparticles used in this study present an excellent delivery platform for siRNA, but do note associated gene changes. Conclusion: The study highlights the need to more widely assess the cell physiological response to RNAi treatment, rather than focus on the immediate RNA levels.

Baptista, Pedro, Eulália Pereira, Peter Eaton, Gonçalo Doria, Adelaide Miranda, Inês Gomes, Pedro Quaresma, and Ricardo Franco. "Gold Nanoparticles for the Development of Clinical Diagnosis Methods." Anal Bioanal Chem. 391 (2008): 943-950.