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  • Mcknight posted an update 12 months ago

    Aurein 1.2 is an antimicrobial peptide from the skin secretion of an Australian frog. In the previous experimental work, we reported a differential action of aurein 1.2 on two probiotic strains Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus (CIDCA 331) and Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. lactis (CIDCA 133). The differences found were attributed to the bilayer compositions. Cell cultures and CIDCA 331-derived liposomes showed higher susceptibility than the ones derived from the CIDCA 133 strain, leading to content leakage and structural disruption. Here, we used molecular dynamics simulations to explore these systems at the atomistic level. We hypothesize that if the antimicrobial peptides organized themselves to form a pore, it will be more stable in membranes that emulate the CIDCA 331 strain than in those of the CIDCA 133 strain. To test this hypothesis, we simulated preassembled aurein 1.2 pores embedded into bilayer models that emulate the two probiotic strains. It was found that the general behavior of the systems depends on the composition of the membrane rather than the preassemble system characteristics. Overall, it was observed that aurein 1.2 pores are more stable in the CIDCA 331 model membranes. This fact coincides with the high susceptibility of this strain against antimicrobial peptide. In contrast, in the case of the CIDCA 133 model membranes, peptides migrate to the water-lipid interphase, the pore shrinks, and the transport of water through the pore is reduced. The tendency of glycolipids to make hydrogen bonds with peptides destabilizes the pore structures. This feature is observed to a lesser extent in CIDCA 331 due to the presence of anionic lipids. Glycolipid transverse diffusion (flip-flop) between monolayers occurs in the pore surface region in all the cases considered. These findings expand our understanding of the antimicrobial peptide resistance properties of probiotic strains.Colloidal quantum dots (QDs) have shown promise over the last few decades for a range of applications including single photon emission, in vivo imaging, and photocatalysis. Recent experiments demonstrated that QDs impart stereoselectivity to triplet excited-state [2 + 2] cycloaddition reactions of alkenes photocatalyzed by the QD through self-assembly of the reagent molecules on the QD surface, but these experiments did not reveal the precise geometries of surface-bound molecules or their interactions with surface atoms. Here, a theoretical mechanistic approach is used to study such interactions for [2 + 2] cycloadditions of 4-vinylbenzoic acid derivatives on CdSe QDs. Spin-polarized periodic density functional theory (DFT) and nonperiodic DFT calculations are deployed to determine the origin of the selectivity for the syn diastereomer of the resultant tetrasubstituted cyclobutane product via atomistic modeling of the CdSe surface and substrates, determination of the thermodynamic energies of reactions for each step, the intermolecular interactions between the substrates, and the triplet state reaction paths. The calculations indicate that reaction selectivity arises from preferred binding of pairs through intermolecular interactions of substrate molecules on the QD surface in a syn-precursor structure followed by dimerization after triplet excitation. OTUB2-IN-1 manufacturer These mechanisms are generalizable to other metal-enriched QD surfaces that have a similar surface structure as that of CdSe, such as InSe or CdTe. Design principles for anti diastereomer derivatives are also discussed.A highly branch- and enantioselective 1,4-enynes synthesis from readily available terminal alkynes and racemic allylic carbonates by Sonogashira type synergistic Rh and Cu catalysis under neutral conditions has been developed. Aliphatic and aromatic terminal alkynes with various functional groups could be used directly. An inner-sphere reductive elimination C(sp)-C(sp3) bond formation mechanism is supported by the stoichiometric reaction.The use of catalysts is the key to boost electrode reactions in lithium-oxygen (Li-O2) batteries. In-depth understanding of the nanoscale catalytic effect at electrode/electrolyte interfaces is of great significance for guiding a design of functionally optimized catalyst. Here, using electrochemical atomic force microscopy, we present the real-time imaging of interfacial evolution on nanostructured Au electrodes in a working battery, revealing that the nanostructure of Au is directly related to the catalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR)/oxygen evolution reaction (OER). In situ views show that nanoporous Au with a size of ∼14 nm for ligaments and ∼5 nm for nanopores promote the nucleation and growth of discharge product Li2O2 with large size at a high discharge voltage, yet densely packed Au nanoparticles with a diameter of ∼15 nm could catalyze Li2O2 to fully decompose via the top-bottom approach at a low charge potential. In addition, the difference in the nucleation potential of Li2O2 on the electrode with hybrid nanostructures could result in an uneven distribution of discharge products, which is alleviated at a large discharge rate and the capacity of the battery is improved significantly. These observations provide deep insights into the mechanisms of Li-O2 interfacial reaction catalyzed by nanostructured catalysts and strategies for improving Li-O2 batteries.The influence of a redox-active ligand on spin-changing events induced by the coordination of exogenous donors is investigated within the cobalt complex [Co II (DPP· 2- )], bearing a redox-active DPP2- ligand (DPP = dipyrrin-bis(o,p-di-tert-butylphenolato) with a pentafluorophenyl moiety on the meso-position. This square-planar complex was subjected to the coordination of tetrahydrofuran (THF), pyridine, tBuNH2, and AdNH2 (Ad = 1-adamantyl), and the resulting complexes were analyzed with a variety of experimental (X-ray diffraction, NMR, UV-visible, high-resolution mass spectrometry, superconducting quantum interference device, Evans’ method) and computational (density functional theory, NEVPT2-CASSCF) techniques to elucidate the respective structures, spin states, and orbital compositions of the corresponding octahedral bis-donor adducts, relative to [Co II (DPP· 2- )]. This starting species is best described as an open-shell singlet complex containing a DPP· 2- ligand radical that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a low-spin (S = 1/2) cobalt(II) center.

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