48 research outputs found
1,8-Naphthyridine-based fluorescent receptors for picric acid detection in aqueous media
We utilized the potential applications of 1,8-naphthyridine-based sensors for the detection of various nitroaromatics such as picric acid (PA), 3-nitrophenol (NP), 2,4-dinitrotoluene (DNT), 1,3-dinitrobenzene (DNB), 4-nitrotoluene (NT), nitrobenzene (NB) and nitromethane (NM). Among the various nitroaromatic analogues, nap-OH (1) and nap-Cl (2) sense picric acid (PA) much more efficiently and with very low detection limits (1.12 and 0.96 ppm, respectively), owing to favourable electron and/or energy transfer mechanisms along with potential electrostatic interactions. Interestingly, both sensors 1 and 2 detect PA in aqueous media (H2O/CH3OH, 8 : 2) with the same quenching efficiency as in neat CH3OH, resulting in cheap, sensitive and environmentally friendly detection methodology. Therefore, use of these molecules for picric acid detection in aqueous and methanolic solutions, having low detection limits along with exceptional quenching constants (kSV) meets the present need. In addition, sensors 1 and 2 exhibit instant visualization of trace amounts of PA in both the solid-state and when using test strips
Porphyrin Chemodosimeters: Synthesis, Electrochemical Redox Properties and Selective ‘Naked-eye’ Detection of Cyanide Ions
Dicyanovinyl appended β-pyrrole substituted porphyrins have been synthesized and utilized as chemodosimeters for ratiometric and colorimetric sensing of cyanide ions. In addition to meso-tetraphenylporphyrin (TPP) based system, we have designed and synthesized octaphenylporphyrin (OPP) based moderately nonplanar systems. These systems also depicted effective π-conjugation between the pyrrole ring and its olefinic substituent which is reflected in the UV-vis absorption spectra as the red-shifting of both Soret and Q-bands and possibly the splitting of the absorption Soret band. This article describes the single crystal X-ray structure, electronic spectral and electrochemical redox properties of these porphyrin chemodosimeters. The stable anionic-porphyrin species formed after addition of CN‒ ions has a blue shifted unperturbed absorption spectrum due to the disruption of electronic resonance and charge-transfer interactions between the β-dicyanovinyl acceptor and porphyrin core. The probes exhibited excellent selectivity towards CN‒ over other anions such as F‒ , Cl‒ , Br‒ , NO3 ‒ , H2PO4 ‒ , AcO‒ , I‒ , HSO4 ‒ , ClO4 ‒ and PF6 ‒ . The action of the chemodosimeters were investigated by 1 H-NMR titrations, ESI-mass spectrometry, electrochemical studies and DFT calculations which supported the formation of cyanide addition adduct (porphyrin–CN)‒ . These chemodosimeters depicted lowest detection limit (LOD) of 0.023-0.082 ppm, which is very much lower than the permissible limit (0.2 ppm) and other porphyrinoids reported till date. These porphyrins are also able to detect cyanide ions in (9:1, v/v) CH3CN:H2O mixture with low detection limits thereby providing practical applicability of these chemodosimeters
Studies of alternaria black spot disease of pomegranate caused by Alternaria alternata in Punjab
Alternaria black spot of pomegranate caused by Alternaria alternata pose significant economic losses in India as it reduce the crop yield. Farm survey was undertaken at Punjab Agricultural University, Pomegranate Research Block, Fruit Research Station, Jallowal- Lesriwal Jalandhar during 2015. Among all the five cultivars highest disease incidence (70%) and severity (30%) was registered in cultivar Bhagwa. Twenty two isolates of A. alternata were recovered from infected fruits and clustered using UPGMA (unweighted pair group method with arithmetic averages) on the basis of disease score produced in five cultivars (Ganesh, Ruby, Bhagwa, Jyoti and Mridula). It was revealed that five isolates namely AL14, AL15, AL20, AL21 and AL22 were highly virulent on almost all the pomegranate cultivars. Two cultivars viz. Bhagwa and Mridula were found to be most susceptible as 45.45 % isolates were found to be highly virulent on them.Thein vitro antifungal effects of the six fungicides on mycelial growth were investigated. Based on the inhibition of mycelial growth, all the fungicides showed most toxic reaction with 50% effective concentrations (EC50) of < 1 ppm. However, they varied in EC90 values. 10 ppm cocentration of Tilt (azole group) showed 90% effective concentration (EC90). Folicur also showed approximately same results as Tilt while EC90 value of Natio and SAAF was <25 ppm and > 20 ppm. However, two fungicides namely Dithane Z-78 and Bavistin showed less toxicity against Alternaria alternata as compared to other with EC90 value at concentrations <50 ppm and > 25 ppm. Azole group fungicides (Tilt and Folicur) were found most effective to inhibit the pathogen growth
Emerging debt and equity markets: an exploratory investigation of integration using daily data
In this paper we examine integration between emerging and U.S. debt and equity markets. We first investigate price changes around significant "events," in this case changes in short-term U.S. interest rates brought about by actions of the Federal Reserve. Second, we estimate the predictability of returns using both domestic and U.S. variables. Finally, we test whether a single latent variable can explain these returns. The evidence suggests that the degree of integration varies with security types and the country of origin. However, these differences between security types become less apparent over time.Financial markets ; International finance
A Case-by-Case Evolutionary Analysis of Four Imprinted Retrogenes
Retroposition is a widespread phenomenon resulting in the generation of new genes that are initially related to a parent gene via very high coding sequence similarity. We examine the evolutionary fate of four retrogenes generated by such an event; mouse Inpp5f_v2, Mcts2, Nap1l5, and U2af1-rs1. These genes are all subject to the epigenetic phenomenon of parental imprinting. We first provide new data on the age of these retrogene insertions. Using codon-based models of sequence evolution, we show these retrogenes have diverse evolutionary trajectories, including divergence from the parent coding sequence under positive selection pressure, purifying selection pressure maintaining parent-retrogene similarity, and neutral evolution. Examination of the expression pattern of retrogenes shows an atypical, broad pattern across multiple tissues. Protein 3D structure modeling reveals that a positively selected residue in U2af1-rs1, not shared by its parent, may influence protein conformation. Our case-by-case analysis of the evolution of four imprinted retrogenes reveals that this interesting class of imprinted genes, while similar in regulation and sequence characteristics, follow very varied evolutionary paths
Anion-enhanced excited state charge separation in a spiro-locked N-heterocycle-fused push-pull zinc porphyrin
A new type of push–pull charge transfer complex, viz., a spiro-locked N-heterocycle-fused zinc porphyrin, ZnP-SQ, is shown to undergo excited state charge separation, which is enhanced by axial F binding to the Zn center. In this push–pull design, the spiro-quinone group acts as a ‘lock’ promoting charge transfer interactions by constraining mutual coplanarity of the meso-phenol-substituted electron-rich Zn(II) porphyrin and an electron deficient N-heterocycle, as revealed by electrochemical and computational studies. Spectroelectrochemical studies have been used to identify the spectra of charge separated states, and charge separation upon photoexcitation of ZnP has been unequivocally established by using transient absorption spectroscopic techniques covering wide spatial and temporal regions. Further, global target analysis of the transient data using GloTarAn software is used to obtain the lifetimes of different photochemical events and reveal that fluoride anion complexation stabilizes the charge separated state to an appreciable extent
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Pushing property limits in materials discovery via boundless objective-free exploration
Materials chemists develop chemical compounds to meet often conflicting demands of industrial applications. This process may not be properly modeled by black-box optimization because the target property is not well defined in some cases. Herein, we propose a new algorithm for automated materials discovery called BoundLess Objective-free eXploration (BLOX) that uses a novel criterion based on kernel-based Stein discrepancy in the property space. Unlike other objective-free exploration methods, a boundary for the materials properties is not needed; hence, BLOX is suitable for open-ended scientific endeavors. We demonstrate the effectiveness of BLOX by finding light-absorbing molecules from a drug database. Our goal is to minimize the number of density functional theory calculations required to discover out-of-trend compounds in the intensity–wavelength property space. Using absorption spectroscopy, we experimentally verified that eight compounds identified as outstanding exhibit the expected optical properties. Our results show that BLOX is useful for chemical repurposing, and we expect this search method to have numerous applications in various scientific disciplines
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De novo creation of a naked eye–detectable fluorescent molecule based on quantum chemical computation and machine learning
Designing fluorescent molecules requires considering multiple interrelated molecular properties, as opposed to properties that straightforwardly correlated with molecular structure, such as light absorption of molecules. In this study, we have used a de novo molecule generator (DNMG) coupled with quantum chemical computation (QC) to develop fluorescent molecules, which are garnering significant attention in various disciplines. Using massive parallel computation (1024 cores, 5 days), the DNMG has produced 3643 candidate molecules. We have selected an unreported molecule and seven reported molecules and synthesized them. Photoluminescence spectrum measurements demonstrated that the DNMG can successfully design fluorescent molecules with 75% accuracy (n = 6/8) and create an unreported molecule that emits fluorescence detectable by the naked eye
Transcript- and tissue-specific imprinting of a tumour suppressor gene
The Bladder Cancer-Associated Protein gene (BLCAP; previously BC10) is a tumour suppressor that limits cell proliferation and stimulates apoptosis. BLCAP protein or message are downregulated or absent in a variety of human cancers. In mouse and human, the first intron of Blcap/BLCAP contains the distinct Neuronatin (Nnat/NNAT) gene. Nnat is an imprinted gene that is exclusively expressed from the paternally inherited allele. Previous studies found no evidence for imprinting of Blcap in mouse or human. Here we show that Blcap is imprinted in mouse and human brain, but not in other mouse tissues. Moreover, Blcap produces multiple distinct transcripts that exhibit reciprocal allele-specific expression in both mouse and human. We propose that the tissue-specific imprinting of Blcap is due to the particularly high transcriptional activity of Nnat in brain, as has been suggested previously for the similarly organized and imprinted murine Commd1/U2af1-rs1 locus. For Commd1/U2af1-rs1, we show that it too produces distinct transcript variants with reciprocal allele-specific expression. The imprinted expression of BLCAP and its interplay with NNAT at the transcriptional level may be relevant to human carcinogenesis
Tools to enable the study and translation of supramolecular amphiphiles
This tutorial review focuses on providing a summary of the key techniques used for the characterisation of supramolecular amphiphiles and their self-assembled aggregates; from the understanding of low-level molecular interactions, to materials analysis, use of data to support computer-aided molecular design and finally, the translation of this class of compounds for real world application, specifically within the clinical setting. We highlight the common methodologies used for the study of traditional amphiphiles and build to provide specific examples that enable the study of specialist supramolecular systems. This includes the use of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, x-ray scattering techniques (small- and wide-angle x-ray scattering and single crystal x-ray diffraction), critical aggregation (or micelle) concentration determination methodologies, machine learning, and various microscopy techniques. Furthermore, this review provides guidance for working with supramolecular amphiphiles in in vitro and in vivo settings, as well as the use of accessible software programs, to facilitate screening and selection of druggable molecules. Each section provides: a methodology overview – information that may be derived from the use of the methodology described; a case study – examples for the application of these methodologies; and a summary section – providing methodology specific benefits, limitations and future applications