Coating colloidal particles with DNA provides one of the most versatile and powerful methods for controlling colloidal self-assembly. Previous studies have shown how combining DNA coatings with DNA strand displacement allows one to design phase transitions between different three-dimensional crystal structures. Here we show that by using DNA coatings with bifunctional colloidal Janus particles, we can realize reconfigurable thermally reversible transitions between one- and two-dimensional self-assembled colloidal structures. We introduce a colloidal system in which DNA-coated asymmetric Janus particles can reversibly switch their Janus balance in response to temperature, resulting in the reconfiguration of assembling structures between colloidal chains and bilayers. Each face of the Janus particles is coated with different self-complementary DNA strands. Toehold strand displacement is employed to selectively activate or deactivate the sticky ends on the smaller face, which enables Janus particles to selectively assemble through either the smaller or larger face. This strategy could be useful for constructing complex systems that could be reconfigured to assemble into different structures in different environments.Herein, we demonstrate the on-demand synthesis of chloramine from aqueous ammonia and sodium hypochlorite solutions, and its subsequent utilization as an ambiphilic nitrogen source in continuous-flow synthesis. Despite its advantages in cost and atom economy, chloramine has not seen widespread use in batch synthesis due to its unstable and hazardous nature. Continuous-flow chemistry, however, provides an excellent platform for generating and handling chloramine in a safe, reliable, and inexpensive manner. Unsaturated aldehydes are converted to valuable aziridines and nitriles, and thioethers are converted to sulfoxides, in moderate to good yields and exceedingly short reaction times. In this telescoped process, chloramine is generated in situ and immediately used, providing safe and efficient conditions for reaction scale-up while mitigating the issue of its decomposition over time.Carbocyclinone-534 is a new antibiotic produced after the metabolism of tapinarof. We identify a biomimetic total synthesis of carbocyclinone-534 in eight steps by taking advantage of an intermolecular Diels-Alder homodimerization/dehydrogenation/intramolecular Diels-Alder cycloaddition cascade. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Vorinostat-saha.html This synthetic sequence provides direct experimental evidence for revealing the biosynthetic pathway of carbocyclinone-534.A novel electron-donor-acceptor (EDA) complex-enabled flow photochemical hydrotrifluoromethylation of unsaturated β-keto esters is described. The developed protocol has an easy experimental procedure and does not require the use of transition-metal-based photocatalysts, allowing the isolation of 14 new compounds in up to 86% yield. Control experiments and computational studies revealed that the reaction proceeds through a Michael-type 1,4-addition of a trifluoromethyl radical, followed by a proton transfer step. Furthermore, the reaction could be scaled up to 1 mmol, and the final product could be employed in the preparation of an isoxazolone and a pyrazolone as trifluoro-substituted heterocycles.Reliable information on the hydrophobicity of porous materials is important in the design of many catalytic and separation processes. In general, hydrophobicity is assessed by measuring the contact angle of water (external surface) or the adsorption isotherm of water (internal surface). However, it is not clear how these different assessments are related. In this paper, molecular dynamics simulations of microscopic water droplets on the external surfaces of metal-organic frameworks are used to investigate the influence of the surface nature and hydrophobicity on the contact angle. The metal-organic frameworks MOF-5 and CAU-10 were modeled with external surfaces of different hydrophobicities, while the internal surface was maintained. It was observed that microscopic droplets orientate their spreading to the nature of the external surfaces. Comparing the simulated contact angles and adsorption isotherms confirms the necessity to distinguish between internal and external hydrophobicity.Heterostructured, including heterophase, noble-metal nanomaterials have attracted **** interest due to their promising applications in diverse fields. However, great challenges still remain in the rational synthesis of well-defined noble-metal heterophase nanostructures. Herein, we report the preparation of Pd nanoparticles with an unconventional hexagonal close-packed (2H type) phase, referred to as 2H-Pd nanoparticles, via a controlled phase transformation of amorphous Pd nanoparticles. Impressively, by using the 2H-Pd nanoparticles as seeds, Au nanomaterials with different crystal phases epitaxially grow on the specific exposed facets of the 2H-Pd, i.e., face-centered cubic (fcc) Au (fcc-Au) on the (002)h facets of 2H-Pd while 2H-Au on the other exposed facets, to achieve well-defined fcc-2H-fcc heterophase Pd@Au core-shell nanorods. Moreover, through such unique facet-directed crystal-phase-selective epitaxial growth, a series of unconventional fcc-2H-fcc heterophase core-shell nanostructures, including Pd@Ag, Pd@Pt, Pd@PtNi, and Pd@PtCo, have also been prepared. Impressively, the fcc-2H-fcc heterophase Pd@Au nanorods show excellent performance toward the electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction reaction (CO2RR) for production of carbon monoxide with Faradaic efficiencies of over 90% in an exceptionally wide applied potential window from -0.9 to -0.4 V (versus the reversible hydrogen electrode), which is among the best reported CO2RR catalysts in H-type electrochemical cells.The transcriptional co-activator with the PDZ binding motif (TAZ) is a critical regulator of numerous cellular processes such as cell differentiation, development, proliferation, and cell growth. Aberrant expression and activity of TAZ are also featured in many human malignancies. A hallmark of TAZ biology is its cytoplasmic retention mediated by 14-3-3 isoforms in response to phosphorylation of Ser89 by members of the LATS family of kinases. Following the observation that TAZ is a highly phosphorylated protein even when Ser89 is mutated, high-resolution mass spectrometry employing data-independent acquisition and ion mobility separation was conducted to elucidate additional TAZ phosphorylation sites that may play a role in regulating this critical transcriptional rheostat. Numerous phosphorylation sites on TAZ were identified, including several novel modifications. Of notable interest was the identification of positional phosphoisomers on a phosphopeptide containing Ser89. Optimized use of a so-called wideband enhancement acquisition technique yielded higher-quality fragmentation data that confirmed the detection of Ser93 as the positional phosphoisomer partner of Ser89 and identified diagnostic fragment ions for the phosphorylation events.
Coating colloidal particles with DNA provides one of the most versatile and powerful methods for controlling colloidal self-assembly. Previous studies have shown how combining DNA coatings with DNA strand displacement allows one to design phase transitions between different three-dimensional crystal structures. Here we show that by using DNA coatings with bifunctional colloidal Janus particles, we can realize reconfigurable thermally reversible transitions between one- and two-dimensional self-assembled colloidal structures. We introduce a colloidal system in which DNA-coated asymmetric Janus particles can reversibly switch their Janus balance in response to temperature, resulting in the reconfiguration of assembling structures between colloidal chains and bilayers. Each face of the Janus particles is coated with different self-complementary DNA strands. Toehold strand displacement is employed to selectively activate or deactivate the sticky ends on the smaller face, which enables Janus particles to selectively assemble through either the smaller or larger face. This strategy could be useful for constructing complex systems that could be reconfigured to assemble into different structures in different environments.Herein, we demonstrate the on-demand synthesis of chloramine from aqueous ammonia and sodium hypochlorite solutions, and its subsequent utilization as an ambiphilic nitrogen source in continuous-flow synthesis. Despite its advantages in cost and atom economy, chloramine has not seen widespread use in batch synthesis due to its unstable and hazardous nature. Continuous-flow chemistry, however, provides an excellent platform for generating and handling chloramine in a safe, reliable, and inexpensive manner. Unsaturated aldehydes are converted to valuable aziridines and nitriles, and thioethers are converted to sulfoxides, in moderate to good yields and exceedingly short reaction times. In this telescoped process, chloramine is generated in situ and immediately used, providing safe and efficient conditions for reaction scale-up while mitigating the issue of its decomposition over time.Carbocyclinone-534 is a new antibiotic produced after the metabolism of tapinarof. We identify a biomimetic total synthesis of carbocyclinone-534 in eight steps by taking advantage of an intermolecular Diels-Alder homodimerization/dehydrogenation/intramolecular Diels-Alder cycloaddition cascade. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Vorinostat-saha.html This synthetic sequence provides direct experimental evidence for revealing the biosynthetic pathway of carbocyclinone-534.A novel electron-donor-acceptor (EDA) complex-enabled flow photochemical hydrotrifluoromethylation of unsaturated β-keto esters is described. The developed protocol has an easy experimental procedure and does not require the use of transition-metal-based photocatalysts, allowing the isolation of 14 new compounds in up to 86% yield. Control experiments and computational studies revealed that the reaction proceeds through a Michael-type 1,4-addition of a trifluoromethyl radical, followed by a proton transfer step. Furthermore, the reaction could be scaled up to 1 mmol, and the final product could be employed in the preparation of an isoxazolone and a pyrazolone as trifluoro-substituted heterocycles.Reliable information on the hydrophobicity of porous materials is important in the design of many catalytic and separation processes. In general, hydrophobicity is assessed by measuring the contact angle of water (external surface) or the adsorption isotherm of water (internal surface). However, it is not clear how these different assessments are related. In this paper, molecular dynamics simulations of microscopic water droplets on the external surfaces of metal-organic frameworks are used to investigate the influence of the surface nature and hydrophobicity on the contact angle. The metal-organic frameworks MOF-5 and CAU-10 were modeled with external surfaces of different hydrophobicities, while the internal surface was maintained. It was observed that microscopic droplets orientate their spreading to the nature of the external surfaces. Comparing the simulated contact angles and adsorption isotherms confirms the necessity to distinguish between internal and external hydrophobicity.Heterostructured, including heterophase, noble-metal nanomaterials have attracted much interest due to their promising applications in diverse fields. However, great challenges still remain in the rational synthesis of well-defined noble-metal heterophase nanostructures. Herein, we report the preparation of Pd nanoparticles with an unconventional hexagonal close-packed (2H type) phase, referred to as 2H-Pd nanoparticles, via a controlled phase transformation of amorphous Pd nanoparticles. Impressively, by using the 2H-Pd nanoparticles as seeds, Au nanomaterials with different crystal phases epitaxially grow on the specific exposed facets of the 2H-Pd, i.e., face-centered cubic (fcc) Au (fcc-Au) on the (002)h facets of 2H-Pd while 2H-Au on the other exposed facets, to achieve well-defined fcc-2H-fcc heterophase Pd@Au core-shell nanorods. Moreover, through such unique facet-directed crystal-phase-selective epitaxial growth, a series of unconventional fcc-2H-fcc heterophase core-shell nanostructures, including Pd@Ag, Pd@Pt, Pd@PtNi, and Pd@PtCo, have also been prepared. Impressively, the fcc-2H-fcc heterophase Pd@Au nanorods show excellent performance toward the electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction reaction (CO2RR) for production of carbon monoxide with Faradaic efficiencies of over 90% in an exceptionally wide applied potential window from -0.9 to -0.4 V (versus the reversible hydrogen electrode), which is among the best reported CO2RR catalysts in H-type electrochemical cells.The transcriptional co-activator with the PDZ binding motif (TAZ) is a critical regulator of numerous cellular processes such as cell differentiation, development, proliferation, and cell growth. Aberrant expression and activity of TAZ are also featured in many human malignancies. A hallmark of TAZ biology is its cytoplasmic retention mediated by 14-3-3 isoforms in response to phosphorylation of Ser89 by members of the LATS family of kinases. Following the observation that TAZ is a highly phosphorylated protein even when Ser89 is mutated, high-resolution mass spectrometry employing data-independent acquisition and ion mobility separation was conducted to elucidate additional TAZ phosphorylation sites that may play a role in regulating this critical transcriptional rheostat. Numerous phosphorylation sites on TAZ were identified, including several novel modifications. Of notable interest was the identification of positional phosphoisomers on a phosphopeptide containing Ser89. Optimized use of a so-called wideband enhancement acquisition technique yielded higher-quality fragmentation data that confirmed the detection of Ser93 as the positional phosphoisomer partner of Ser89 and identified diagnostic fragment ions for the phosphorylation events.
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