68 research outputs found
Serbische Geschichtspolitik im neuen Jahrtausend : die Gleichzeitigkeit von akademischem Geschichtsrevisionismus und staatlicher Vergangenheitsumdeutung
The geometric relaxation following light absorption of the biliverdin, phycocyanobilin and phytochromobilin tetrapyrrole chromophores of bacterial, cyanobacterial and plant phytochromes has been investigated using density functional theory methods. Considering stereoisomers relevant for both red-absorbing Pr and far-red-absorbing Pfr forms of the photoreceptor, it is found that the initial excited-state evolution is dominated by torsional motion at the C10-C11 bond. This holds true for all three chromophores and irrespective of which configuration the chromophores adopt. This finding suggests that the photochromic cycling of phytochromes between their Pr and Pfr forms, which is known to be governed by Z/E photoisomerizations at the C15-C16 bond, relies on interactions between the chromophore and the protein to prevent photoisomerizations at C10-C11. Further, it is found that the uneven distribution of positive charge between the pyrrole rings is a major factor for the photochemical reactivity of the C10-C11 bond.Original Publication:Angela Strambi and Bo Durbeej, Initial excited-state relaxation of the bilin chromophores of phytochromes: a computational study, 2011, PHOTOCHEMICAL and PHOTOBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, (10), 4, 569-579.http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c0pp00307gCopyright: Royal Society of Chemistryhttp://www.rsc.org
Iterative dual-metal and energy transfer catalysis enables stereodivergence in alkyne difunctionalization: Carboboration as case study
Stereochemically defined tetrasubstituted olefins are widespread structural elements of organic molecules and key intermediates in organic synthesis. However, flexible methods enabling stereodivergent access to E and Z isomers of fully substituted alkenes from a common precursor represent a significant challenge and are actively sought after in catalysis, especially those amenable to complex multifunctional molecules. Herein, we demonstrate that iterative dual-metal and energy transfer catalysis constitutes a unique platform for achieving stereodivergence in the difunctionalization of internal alkynes. The utility of this approach is showcased by the stereodivergent synthesis of both stereoisomers of tetrasubstituted β-boryl acrylates from internal alkynoates with excellent stereocontrol via sequential carboboration and photoisomerization. The reluctance of electron-deficient internal alkynes to undergo catalytic carboboration has been overcome through cooperative Cu/Pd-catalysis, whereas an Ir complex was identified as a versatile sensitizer that is able to photoisomerize the resulting sterically crowded alkenes. Mechanistic studies by means of quantum-chemical calculations, quenching experiments, and transient absorption spectroscopy have been applied to unveil the mechanism of both stepsPGC2018-098660−B-I00, Horizon2020 (ERC) No.648319, PID2019-106315RB-I00, PID2020-118593RB-C22
An In Vitro Model of the Glomerular Capillary Wall Using Electrospun Collagen Nanofibres in a Bioartificial Composite Basement Membrane
The filtering unit of the kidney, the glomerulus, contains capillaries whose walls function as a biological sieve, the glomerular filtration barrier. This comprises layers of two specialised cells, glomerular endothelial cells (GEnC) and podocytes, separated by a basement membrane. Glomerular filtration barrier function, and dysfunction in disease, remains incompletely understood, partly due to difficulties in studying the relevant cell types in vitro. We have addressed this by generation of unique conditionally immortalised human GEnC and podocytes. However, because the glomerular filtration barrier functions as a whole, it is necessary to develop three dimensional co-culture models to maximise the benefit of the availability of these cells. Here we have developed the first two tri-layer models of the glomerular capillary wall. The first is based on tissue culture inserts and provides evidence of cell-cell interaction via soluble mediators. In the second model the synthetic support of the tissue culture insert is replaced with a novel composite bioartificial membrane. This consists of a nanofibre membrane containing collagen I, electrospun directly onto a micro-photoelectroformed fine nickel supporting mesh. GEnC and podocytes grew in monolayers on either side of the insert support or the novel membrane to form a tri-layer model recapitulating the human glomerular capillary in vitro. These models will advance the study of both the physiology of normal glomerular filtration and of its disruption in glomerular disease
Quantum Chemical Studies of Protein-Bound Chromophores, UV-Light Induced DNA Damages, and Lignin Formation
Quantum chemical methods have been used to provide a better understanding of the photochemistry of astaxanthin and phytochromobilin; the photoenzymic repair of UV-light induced DNA damages; and the formation of lignin. The carotenoid astaxanthin (AXT) is responsible for the colouration of lobster shell. In solution, the electronic absorption spectra of AXT peak in the 470-490 nm region, corresponding to an orange-red colouration. Upon binding to the lobster-shell protein-complex α-crustacyanin, the absorption maximum is shifted to 632 nm, yielding a slate-blue colouration. Herein, the structural origin of this bathochromic shift is investigated on the basis of recent experimental work. The tetrapyrrole phytochromobilin (PΦB) underlies the photoactivation of the plant photoreceptor phytochrome. Upon absorption of 660-nm light, PΦB isomerizes from a C15-Z,syn configuration (in the inactive form of the protein) to C15-E,anti (in the active form). In this work, a reaction mechanism for this isomerization is proposed. DNA photolyases are enzymes that repair DNA damages resulting from far-UV-light induced [2+2] cycloaddition reactions involving pyrimidine nucleobases. The catalytic activity of these enzymes is initiated by near-UV and visible light, and is governed by electron transfer processes between a catalytic cofactor of the enzyme and the DNA lesions. Herein, an explanation for the experimental observation that the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) – the major type of lesion – proceeds by electron transfer from the enzyme to the dimer is presented. Furthermore, the formation of CPD is studied. Lignin is formed by dehydrogenative polymerization of hydroxycinnamyl alcohols. A detailed understanding of the polymerization mechanism and the factors controlling the outcome of the polymerization is, however, largely missing. Quantum chemical calculations on the initial dimerization step have been performed in order to gain some insight into these issues
Modeling of phytochrome absorption spectra
Phytochromes constitute one of the six well-characterized families of photosensory proteins in Nature. From the viewpoint of computational modeling, however, phytochromes have been the subject of much fewer studies than most other families of photosensory proteins, which is likely a consequence of relevant high-resolution structural data becoming available only in recent years. In this work, hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) methods are used to calculate UV-vis absorption spectra of Deinococcus radiodurans bacteriophytochrome. We investigate how the choice of QM/MM methodology affects the resulting spectra and demonstrate that QM/MM methods can reproduce the experimental absorption maxima of both the Q and Soret bands with an accuracy of about 0.15 eV. Furthermore, we assess how the protein environment influences the intrinsic absorption of the bilin chromophore, with particular focus on the Q band underlying the primary photochemistry of phytochromes
Theoretical Study of Ground- and Excited-State Charge Transfer in Fulvene-Based Donor-Acceptor Systems
Donor-acceptor systems based on fulvene as the electron-accepting moiety are typified by exotic, strongly polar electronic structures. In this contribution, ab initio calculations have been performed to explore the ground- and excited-state properties of an archetypal compound of this class, which incorporates the exocyclic carbon atom of fulvene into a tetramethylimidazoline-like five-membered ring. In the electronic ground state, the compound under study has a pronounced zwitterionic character and is best described as consisting of a negatively charged cyclopentadienyl ring linked covalently to a positively charged tetramethylimidazolium ring. Both of these rings can be considered as aromatic. The excess negative charge localized on the cyclopentadienyl ring is highly labile in the photochemical sense: the low-lying valence excited states exhibit varying degrees of reverse charge transfer, whereby electron density is transferred from the cyclopentadienyl ring back onto the tetramethylimidazolium ring. The topographies of the excited-state potential energy surfaces favor rapid and efficient internal conversion at an extended, fulvene-like S1/S0 conical intersection seam. As a consequence, the excited-state lifetime of this compound is predicted to be on the order of 100 fs.
Simulating the Nonadiabatic Relaxation Dynamics of 4-(N,N-Dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN) in Polar Solution
The compound 4-(N,N-dimethylamino)-benzonitrile (DMABN) represents the archetypal system for dual fluorescence, a rare photophysical phenomenon in which a given fluorophore shows two distinct emission bands. Despite extensive studies, the underlying mechanism remains the subject of debate. In the present contribution, we address this issue by simulating the excited-state relaxation process of DMABN as it occurs in polar solution. The potential energy surfaces for the system are constructed with the use of the additive quantum mechanics/molecular mechanism (QM/MM) method, and the coupled dynamics of the electronic wave function and the nuclei is propagated with the semiclassical fewest switches surface hopping method. The DMABN molecule, which comprises the QM subsystem, is treated with the use of the second-order algebraic diagrammatic construction (ADC(2)) method with the imposition of spin-opposite scaling (SOS). It is verified that this level of theory achieves a realistic description of the excited-state potential energy surfaces of DMABN. The simulation results qualitatively reproduce the main features of the experimentally observed fluorescence spectrum, thus allowing the unambiguous assignment of the two fluorescence bands: the normal band is due to the near-planar locally excited (LE) structure of DMABN, while the so-called "anomalous" second band arises from the twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) structure. The transformation of the LE structure into the TICT structure takes place directly via intramolecular rotation, and is not mediated by another excited-state structure. In particular, the oft-discussed rehybridized intramolecular charge transfer (RICT) structure, which is characterized by a bent nitrile group, does not play a role in the relaxation process. Â Funding agencies: Stiftelsen Olle Engkvist ByggmastareSwedish Research Council [184-568]; Wenner-Gren Stiftelserna [UPD2018-0102]; Linkoping University</p
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