Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:6.2.1.1 (
ACS
)
78,556
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on reversible temperature-triggered swelling transitions in
hydrogen
-bonded multilayer films of a polycarboxylic acid and stimuli-responsive block copolymer micelles (BCMs). A neutral
hydrogen
-bonding temperature-responsive diblock copolymer, poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone)-b-poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PVPON-b-PNIPAM), was synthesized by macromolecular design via the interchange of xanthates (MADIX). The block copolymer exhibited reversible micellization, forming PNIPAM-core micelles with PVPON coronae in 0.01 M buffer solutions at temperatures higher than 34 degrees C, or in solutions with high salt concentrations (C(NaCl) > 0.4 M) at 20 degrees C. The PVPON-b-PNIPAM BCMs were then assembled with poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA) at acidic pH and higher temperature using the layer-by-layer (LbL) technique. Within the
hydrogen
-bonded multilayer, BCMs were stabilized through
hydrogen
bonding between PVPON and PMAA units and, unlike in solution, did not dissociate into unimers in low-salt solution at T < 34 degrees C. Instead, PVPON-b-PNIPAM BCMs reversibly swelled within film in response to temperature- or salt-concentration variations, reflecting collapse and dissolution of the BCM PNIPAM cores. The capacity of BCM/PMAA films to retain hydrophobic molecules was also dramatically dependent on temperature and/or ionic strength. The characteristic release time of pyrene from a [BCM/PMAA](10) film decreased from 80 to 10 min upon a decrease in temperature from 37 to 20 degrees C. In addition, at 20 degrees C, ionic strength was also capable of controlling the collapse of PNIPAM micellar cores and the subsequent film swelling and pyrene release rate. Incorporation of stimuli-responsive BCM micelles within LbL films opens new opportunities in designing nanoscale films capable of controlling molecular swelling, transport, and diffusion in response to environmental stimuli.
ACS
Nano 2009 Nov 24
PMID:Temperature-induced swelling and small molecule release with hydrogen-bonded multilayers of block copolymer micelles. 1979 44
Chemical synthesis is a powerful method for precise modification of the structural and electronic properties of proteins. The difficulties in the synthesis and purification of peptides containing transmembrane segments have presented obstacles to the chemical synthesis of integral membrane proteins. Here, we present a modular strategy for the semisynthesis of integral membrane proteins in which solid-phase peptide synthesis is limited to the region of interest, while the rest of the protein is obtained by recombinant means. This modular strategy considerably simplifies the synthesis and purification steps that have previously hindered the chemical synthesis of integral membrane proteins. We develop a SUMO fusion and proteolysis approach for obtaining the N-terminal cysteine containing membrane-spanning peptides required for the semisynthesis. We demonstrate the feasibility of the modular approach by the semisynthesis of full-length KcsA K(+) channels in which only regions of interest, such as the selectivity filter or the pore helix, are obtained by chemical synthesis. The modular approach is used to investigate the
hydrogen
bond interactions of a tryptophan residue in the pore helix, tryptophan 68, by substituting it with the isosteric analogue, beta-(3-benzothienyl)-l-alanine (3BT). A functional analysis of the 3BT mutant channels indicates that the K(+) conduction and selectivity of the 3BT mutant channels are similar to those of the wild type, but the mutant channels show a 3-fold increase in Rb(+) conduction. These results suggest that the
hydrogen
bond interactions of tryptophan 68 are essential for optimizing the selectivity filter for K(+) conduction over Rb(+) conduction.
ACS
Chem Biol 2009 Dec 18
PMID:Modular strategy for the semisynthesis of a K+ channel: investigating interactions of the pore helix. 1980
Different crystal structures have been proposed as a basis for titanium oxide nanotubes. We have used atomistic simulation techniques to calculate the relative stability of nanotubes with these different crystal structures. Our approach is to use energy minimization, where the total interaction energy is calculated with interatomic potentials based on the Born model of solids. The results reveal nanotubes with the trititanate structure to be the most stable (at unit activity for water). Indeed, nanotubes with the trititanate structure were found to be thermodynamically more favorable than bulk trititanate for nanotube diameters greater than approximately 8 nm. However, the formation of cross-linking bonds between layers of the trititanate structure occurred frequently; this problem was eliminated by replacing two out of three Ti(4+) ions with Ti(3+) ions, although this resulted in a higher energy. Of the structures that do not contain
hydrogen
, chiral nanotubes made from (101) sheets of anatase are the lowest in energy, suggesting that this is the most likely structure for nanotubes synthesized at low water chemical potential. In general, the stability of the nanotubes increased as the nanotube diameter increased.
ACS
Nano 2009 Nov 24
PMID:Energy minimization of single-walled titanium oxide nanotubes. 1984 36
Organometallic nanomaterials hold the promise for molecular
hydrogen
(H(2)) storage by providing nearly ideal binding strength to H(2) for room-temperature applications. Synthesizing such materials, however, faces severe setbacks due to the problem of metal clustering. Inspired by a recent experimental breakthrough ( J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008 , 130 , 6992 ), which demonstrates enhanced H(2) binding in Ti-grafted mesoporous silica, we propose combining the graphene oxide (GO) technique with Ti anchoring to overcome the current synthesis bottleneck for practical storage materials. Similar to silica, GO contains ample hydroxyl groups, which are the active sites for anchoring Ti atoms. GO can be routinely synthesized and is much lighter than silica. Hence, higher gravimetric storage capacity can be readily achieved. Our first-principles computations suggest that GO is primarily made of low-energy oxygen-containing structural motifs on the graphene sheet. The Ti atoms bind strongly to the oxygen sites with binding energies as high as 450 kJ/mol. This is comparable to that of silica and is indeed enough to prevent the Ti atoms from clustering. Each Ti can bind multiple H(2) with the desired binding energies (14-41 kJ/mol-H(2)). The estimated theoretical gravimetric and volumetric densities are 4.9 wt % and 64 g/L, respectively.
ACS
Nano 2009 Oct 27
PMID:Graphene oxide as an ideal substrate for hydrogen storage. 1985 79
The alpha-Fe(2)O(3) with various morphologies has been successfully synthesized via an ionic liquid-assisted hydrothermal synthetic method. The samples are characterized by X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, field emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM), transmission electron microscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. The results indicate that the as-prepared samples are alpha-Fe(2)O(3) nanoparticles, mesoporous hollow microspheres, microcubes, and porous nanorods. The effects of the ionic liquid 1-n-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride ([bmim][Cl]) on the formation of the alpha-Fe(2)O(3) with various morphologies have been investigated systematically. The proposed formation mechanisms have also been investigated on the basis of a series of FE-SEM studies of the products obtained at different durations. Because of the unique porous structure, the potential application in water treatment of the alpha-Fe(2)O(3) porous nanorods was investigated. The UV-vis measurements suggest that the as-synthesized pure alpha-Fe(2)O(3) with various morphologies possess different optical properties depending on the shape and size of the samples. The magnetic hysteresis measurements indicate the interesting magnetic property evolution in the as-prepared alpha-Fe(2)O(3) samples, which is attributed to the superstructure or the shape anisotropy of the samples. This method is expected to be a useful technique for controlling the diverse shapes of crystalline inorganic materials for a variety of applications, such as sensors, gas and heavy metal ion adsorbents, catalytic fields,
hydrogen
and Li ion storage, and controlled drug delivery, etc.
ACS
Nano 2009 Nov 24
PMID:Hematite (alpha-Fe2O3) with various morphologies: ionic liquid-assisted synthesis, formation mechanism, and properties. 1987 95
Nanoparticles of magnesium hydride were embedded in nanoporous carbon aerogel scaffold materials in order to explore the kinetic properties of
hydrogen
uptake and release. A new modified procedure for the synthesis of magnesium hydride nanoparticles is presented. The procedure makes use of monoliths (approximately 0.4 cm(3)) of two distinct types of nanoporous resorcinol-formaldehyde carbon aerogels loaded with dibutylmagnesium, MgBu(2). Excess MgBu(2) was removed mechanically, and the increase in mass was used as a measure of the amount of embedded MgH(2). Energy-dispersive spectrometry revealed that MgH(2) was uniformly distributed within the aerogel material. In situ synchrotron radiation powder X-ray diffraction showed that MgBu(2) transformed directly to MgH(2) at T approximately 137 degrees C and p(H(2)) = 50 bar. Two distinct aerogel samples, denoted X1 and X2, with pore volumes of 1.27 and 0.65 mL/g and average pore sizes of 22 and 7 nm, respectively, were selected. In these samples, the uptake of magnesium hydride was found to be proportional to the pore volume, and aerogels X1 and X2 incorporated 18.2 and 10.0 wt % of MgH(2), respectively. For the two samples, the volumetric MgH(2) uptake was similar, approximately 12 vol %. The
hydrogen
storage properties of nanoconfined MgH(2) were studied by Sieverts' measurements and thermal desorption spectroscopy, which clearly demonstrated that the dehydrogenation kinetics of the confined hydride depends on the pore size distribution of the scaffold material; that is, smaller pores mediated faster desorption rates possibly due to a size reduction of the confined magnesium hydride.
ACS
Nano 2009 Nov 24
PMID:Confinement of MgH2 nanoclusters within nanoporous aerogel scaffold materials. 1988 20
Silicon quantum dots (QDs) were prepared with a corona of di-n-octyl phosphine oxides, by performing hydrosilylation chemistry on the surface of
hydrogen
-terminated Si QDs. These novel Si QDs proved well-suited to serve as "ligands" for other semiconductor QDs, such as CdSe, by interaction of the phosphine oxide corona with the CdSe surface. A pronounced photoluminescence quenching of CdSe quantum dots was observed upon introduction of the phosphine oxide functionalized Si QDs to a CdSe QD solution. Surface functionalization of the Si QDs proved critically important to observing these effects, as conventional (alkane-covered) Si QD samples gave no evidence of electronic interactions with TOPO-covered CdSe. In a comparative system, phosphine oxide terminated oligo(phenylene vinylene) molecules acting as CdSe QD ligands provide a similar fluorescence quenching, with exciton decay kinetics supporting the formation of an electronically interacting hybrid materials system.
ACS
Nano 2009 Dec 22
PMID:Functional Si and CdSe quantum dots: synthesis, conjugate formation, and photoluminescence quenching by surface interactions. 1990 57
We investigate for the first time hydrophobic carbon nanotube-based electrochemical cells as an alternative solution to
hydrogen
sorting. We show that the electrically conducting surface of the nanotube arrays can be used as a cathode for
hydrogen
generation and absorption by electrolyzing water. We support our findings with Raman and gas chromatography measurements. These results suggest that carbon nanotube forests, presenting a unique combination of hydrophobicity and conductivity, are suitable for application in fuel cells and microelectromechanical devices.
ACS
Nano 2009 Dec 22
PMID:Hydrogen evolution on hydrophobic aligned carbon nanotube arrays. 1992 98
Nature provides key components for generating fuels from renewable resources in the form of enzymatic nanomachines which catalyze crucial steps in biological energy conversion, for example, the photosynthetic apparatus, which transforms solar power into chemical energy, and hydrogenases, capable of generating molecular
hydrogen
. As sunlight is usually used to synthesize carbohydrates, direct generation of
hydrogen
from light represents an exception in nature. On the molecular level, the crucial step for conversion of solar energy into H(2) lies in the efficient electronic coupling of photosystem I and hydrogenase. Here we show the stepwise assembly of a hybrid complex consisting of photosystem I and hydrogenase on a solid gold surface. This device gave rise to light-induced H(2) evolution.
Hydrogen
production is possible at far higher potential and thus lower energy compared to those of previously described (bio)nanoelectronic devices that did not employ the photosynthesis apparatus. The successful demonstration of efficient solar-to-
hydrogen
conversion may serve as a blueprint for the establishment of this system in a living organism with the paramount advantage of self-replication.
ACS
Nano 2009 Dec 22
PMID:Photosynthetic hydrogen production by a hybrid complex of photosystem I and [NiFe]-hydrogenase. 1994 46
TiO(2) nanotube arrays formed on Ti substrate by electrochemical anodization have been converted into TiO(2)-SrTiO(3) heterostructures by controlled substitution of Sr under hydrothermal conditions. The growth of SrTiO(3) crystallites on the nanotube array electrode was probed by electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. As the degree of Sr substitution increases with the duration of hydrothermal treatment, an increase in the size of SrTiO(3) crystallites was observed. Consequently, with increasing SrTiO(3) fraction in the TiO(2)-SrTiO(3) nanotube arrays, we observed a shift in the flat band potential to more negative potentials, thus confirming the influence of SrTiO(3) in the modification of the photoelectrochemical properties. The TiO(2)-SrTiO(3) composite heterostructures obtained with 1 h or less hydrothermal treatment exhibit the best photoelectrochemical performance with nearly 100% increase in external quantum efficiency at 360 nm. The results presented here provide a convenient way to tailor the photoelectrochemical properties of TiO(2)-SrTiO(3) nanotube array electrodes and employ them for dye- or quantum-dot-sensitized solar cells and/or photocatalytic
hydrogen
production.
ACS
Nano 2010 Jan 26
PMID:Tailored TiO2-SrTiO3 heterostructure nanotube arrays for improved photoelectrochemical performance. 2000 Jul 56
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>