3,326 research outputs found
Coherent electronic and nuclear dynamics in a rhodamine heterodimer-DNA supramolecular complex
Elucidating the role of quantum coherences in energy migration within biological and artificial multichromophoric antenna systems is the subject of an intense debate. It is also a practical matter because of the decisive implications for understanding the biological processes and engineering artificial materials for solar energy harvesting. A supramolecular rhodamine heterodimer on a DNA scaffold was suitably engineered to mimic the basic donor-acceptor unit of light-harvesting antennas. Ultrafast 2D electronic spectroscopic measurements allowed identifying clear features attributable to a coherent superposition of dimer electronic and vibrational states contributing to the coherent electronic charge beating between the donor and the acceptor. The frequency of electronic charge beating is found to be 970 cm-1 (34 fs) and can be observed for 150 fs. Through the support of high level ab initio TD-DFT computations of the entire dimer, we established that the vibrational modes preferentially optically accessed do not drive subsequent coupling between the electronic states on the 600 fs of the experiment. It was thereby possible to characterize the time scales of the early time femtosecond dynamics of the electronic coherence built by the optical excitation in a large rigid supramolecular system at a room temperature in solution. © 2017 the Owner Societies.Multi valued and parallel molecular logi
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Issued as Interim technical report and final technical report Project no. A-106
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Band-collision gel electrophoresis.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays are widely used in gel electrophoresis to study binding interactions between different molecular species loaded into the same well. However, shift assays can access only a subset of reaction possibilities that could be otherwise seen if separate bands of reagent species might instead be collisionally reacted. Here, we adapt gel electrophoresis by fabricating two or more wells in the same lane, loading these wells with different reagent species, and applying an electric field, thereby producing collisional reactions between propagating pulse-like bands of these species, which we image optically. For certain pairs of anionic and cationic dyes, propagating bands pass through each other unperturbed; yet, for other pairs, we observe complexing and precipitation reactions, indicating strong attractive interactions. We generalize this band-collision gel electrophoresis (BCGE) approach to other reaction types, including acid-base, ligand exchange, and redox, as well as to colloidal species in passivated large-pore gels
Determination of secondary species in solution through pump-selective transient absorption spectroscopy and explicit-solvent TDDFT
The measured electronic excitations of a given species in solution are often a composite of the electronic excitations of various equilibrium species of that molecule. It is common for a proportion of a species to deprotonate in solution, or form a tautomeric equilibrium, producing new peaks corresponding to the electronic excitations of the new species. One prominent example is alizarin in methanol, which at different temperatures, and in solutions with differing pH, has an isosbestic point between the two dominant excitations at 435 and 540 nm. The peak at 435 nm has been attributed to alizarin; the peak at 540 nm, however, more likely results from a species in equilibrium with alizarin. In this work, we were able to use both experimental and computational techniques to selectively examine electronic properties of both alizarin and its secondary species in equilibrium. This was achieved through use of transient electronic absorption spectroscopy, following selective photoexcitation of a specific species in equilibrium. The resulting transient electronic absorption spectra were compared to the known transient absorption spectra of potential secondary equilibrium species. The ground state absorption spectra associated with each species in equilibrium were predicted using linear-scaling time-dependent density functional theory with an explicitly modeled solvent and compared to the experimental result. This evidence from both techniques combines to suggest that the excitation at 540 nm arises from a specific monoanionic form of alizarin
Investigating color additive molecules for pharmaceutical and cosmetic applications: A comparison of theoretical and experimental UV-visible absorbance spectra in tunable solvents
Color additive molecules have widespread applications ranging from ingestible foods and pharmaceutics to non-ingestible cosmetics and other naturally or synthetically developed consumer products available worldwide. Certification for approved use of color additives varies globally; therefore, a feasible method to analyze existing color additives or to design novel color additive molecules with enhanced or otherwise desired physicochemical properties (such as hue) is in high demand for universal adoption. The studies herein provide sufficient proof that density functional theory and time-dependent density functional theory serve as effective predictive modeling techniques for generating theoretical maximum absorbance spectral peak responsivity for a single color additive molecule structure in the virtual workspace, as well as for multiple (heterodimeric and heterotrimeric) structures represented simultaneously. Furthermore, DFT and TD-DFT can be used to analyze changes in hue attributed to structural anomalies in molecules due to tautomerism, vibronic effects, intra- or intermolecular interactions, implicit or explicit solvation effects, or charge transfer effects on the structure represented in a given solvent or in vapor phase. Advancements in computational processing make incorporation of these and similar advanced ab initio quantum chemical methods more tangible for the modern pharmaceutical or cosmetic formulator to use in perfecting batch hue
Melanin-binding colorants: updating molecular modeling, staining and labeling mechanisms, and biomedical perspectives
Melanin and melanoma tumors are two fields of increasing interest in biomedical research.
Melanins are ubiquitous biopigments with adaptive value and multiple functions, and occur in the
malignant melanoma. Although several chemical structures have been proposed for eumelanin,
molecular modeling and orbitals indicate that a planar or spiral benzoquinone-porphycene polymer
would be the model that better explains the broad-band light and ultrasound absorption, electric
conductivity, and graphite-like organization shown by X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy.
Lysosomes and melanosomes are selectively labeled by vital probes, and melanin also binds to
metal cations, colorants, and drugs, with important consequences in pharmacology, pathology,
and melanoma therapy. In addition to traditional and recent oncologic treatments, photodynamic,
photothermal, and ultrasound protocols represent novel modalities for melanoma therapy. Since
eumelanin is practically the ideal photothermal and ultrasound sensitizer, the vibrational decay
from photo-excited electrons after NIR irradiation, or the electrochemical production of ROS and
radicals after ultrasound absorption, induce an efficient heating or oxidative response, resulting in
the damage and death of tumor cells. This allows repetitive treatments due to the remaining melanin
contained in tumoral melanophages. Given that evolution and prognosis of the advanced melanoma
is still a concern, new biophysical procedures based on melanin properties can now be developed
and applie
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FRET-based dynamic structural biology: Challenges, perspectives and an appeal for open-science practices
Single-molecule FRET (smFRET) has become a mainstream technique for studying biomolecular structural dynamics. The rapid and wide adoption of smFRET experiments by an ever-increasing number of groups has generated significant progress in sample preparation, measurement procedures, data analysis, algorithms and documentation. Several labs that employ smFRET approaches have joined forces to inform the smFRET community about streamlining how to perform experiments and analyze results for obtaining quantitative information on biomolecular structure and dynamics. The recent efforts include blind tests to assess the accuracy and the precision of smFRET experiments among different labs using various procedures. These multi-lab studies have led to the development of smFRET procedures and documentation, which are important when submitting entries into the archiving system for integrative structure models, PDB-Dev. This position paper describes the current ‘state of the art’ from different perspectives, points to unresolved methodological issues for quantitative structural studies, provides a set of ‘soft recommendations’ about which an emerging consensus exists, and lists openly available resources for newcomers and seasoned practitioners. To make further progress, we strongly encourage ‘open science’ practices
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