Thünemann, A. F.; Sander, K.; Jaeger, W.; Dimova, R.: Polyampholyte-dressed micelles of fluorinated and hydrogenated dodecanoic acid. Langmuir 18 (13), pp. 5099 - 5105 (2002)
Dimova, R.; Danov, K.; Pouligny, B.; Ivanov, I. B.: Drag of a solid particle trapped in a thin film or at an interface: Influence of surface viscosity and elasticity. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 226, pp. 35 - 43 (2000)
Mangiarotti, A.; Dimova, R.: The spectral phasor approach to resolving membrane order with environmentally sensitive dyes. In: Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 700, pp. 105 - 126 (Eds. Baumgart, T.; Deserno, M.). Academic Press (2024)
Lira, R. d.; Dimova, R.: Fusion assays for model membranes: a critical review. In: Advances in Biomembranes and Lipid Self-Assembly, Vol. 30, pp. 229 - 270. Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam (2019)
Steinkühler, J.; Dimova, R.: Giant vesicles: a biomimetic tool for assessing membrane material properties and interactions. In: Characterization of biological membranes: structure and dynamics, pp. 415 - 440 (Eds. Nieh, M.-P.; Heberle, F. A.). Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston (2019)
Dimova, R.; Riske, K. A.: Electrodeformation, Electroporation, and Electrofusion of Giant Unilamellar Vesicles. In: Handbook of Electroporation (Ed. Miklavcic, D.). Springer International Publishing, Cham (2016)
Dimova, R.: Membrane electroporation in high electric fields. In: Bioelectrochemistry: fundamentals, applications and recent developments, pp. 335 - 367 (Eds. Alkire, R. C.; Kolb, D. M.; Lipkowski, J.). Wiley-VCH, Weinheim (2011)
Yang, P.; Dimova, R.: Nanoparticle synthesis in vesicle microreactors. In: Biomimetic based applications, pp. 523 - 552 (Ed. George, A.). InTech, Rijeka (2011)
Müller, M. J. I.; Beeg, J.; Dimova, R.; Klumpp, S.; Lipowsky, R.: Traffic by small teams of molecular motors. In: Traffic and Granular Flow '07, pp. 695 - 700 (Eds. Appert-Rolland, C.; Chevoir, F.; Gondret, P.; Lassarre, S.; Lebacque, J.-P. et al.). Springer, Berlin (2009)
Dimova, R.; Pouligny, B.: Optical dynamometry to study phase transitions in lipid membranes. In: Methods in membrane lipids, pp. 227 - 236 (Ed. Dopico, A.). Humana Press, Totowa (2007)
Fricke, N.; Dimova, R.: How GM1 Affects the Phase State and Mechanical Properties of Phospholipid Membranes. Biophysical Journal (Annual Meeting Abstracts) 108 (2), p. 18A - 18A (2015)
Lira, R. B.; Dimova, R.; Riske, K. A.: Giant unilamellar vesicles from films of agarose and lipids display hindered mechanical response. European Biophysics Journal with Biophysics Letters 42 (Suppl. 1), P-345, p. S125 - S125 (2013)
Steinkühler, J.; Bartelt, S.; Wegner, S.; Knorr, R. L.; Dimova, R.; Lipowsky, R.: Budding and Fission of Vesicles by Control of Membrane Spontaneous Curvature. In Biophysical Journal, 116 (3, Suppl. 1), 1619-Plat, pp. 328a - 329a. Cell Press, Cambridge, Mass. (2019)
Supported by the EU’s Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions and the UK Guarantee Scheme, the 'Condensates at Membrane Scaffolds – Integrated Systems as Synthetic Cell Compartments’ doctoral network seeks 17 PhD candidates. This international and interdisciplinary program aims to train future biomedical and biotechnology researchers to explore cellular…
Scientists can now predict structural colors in bacteria. By sequencing a wide range of bacterial DNA and developing an accurate predictive model, reseachers uncovered how bacteria organize themselves into specific patterns within colonies to interfere with light and create iridescence.Their findings hold great promise for sustainable, pigment-free color production.
Biomolecular condensates may play a crucial but overlooked role in remodeling membrane structures within cells. Rumiana Dimova and her team demonstrated that these droplets can shape parts of the endoplasmic reticulum into nanotubes and double-membrane discs without the need for specific curvature-molding proteins.
Imagine switching on a light and being able to understand and control the inner dynamics of a cell. This is what the Dimova group has achieved: by shining lights of different colors on replicates of cells, they altered the interactions between cellular elements. Controlling these complex interactions enables us to deliver specific drugs directly into the cells.
Little is known yet about the interaction between these biomolecular condensate droplets and the membrane-bound organelles. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces in Potsdam developed synthetic membraneless organelles and visualized what happens when they meet a membrane.
Prof Silvia Vignolini, Ph.D. is establishing the new Department "Sustainable and Bio-inspired Materials". She is working at the interface of physics, chemistry, biology and materials science and perfectly complements the institute's profile of research on chemistry, materials and sustainability.