3 research outputs found

    A Unique Mechanochemical Redox Reaction Yielding Nanostructured Double Perovskite Sr2_{2}FeMoO6_{6} With an Extraordinarily High Degree of Anti-Site Disorder

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    Strontium ferromolybdate, Sr(2)FeMoO(6), is an important member of the family of double perovskites with the possible technological applications in the field of spintronics and solid oxide fuel cells. Its preparation via a multi-step ceramic route or various wet chemistry-based routes is notoriously difficult. The present work demonstrates that Sr(2)FeMoO(6) can be mechanosynthesized at ambient temperature in air directly from its precursors (SrO, α-Fe, MoO(3)) in the form of nanostructured powders, without the need for solvents and/or calcination under controlled oxygen fugacity. The mechanically induced evolution of the Sr(2)FeMoO(6) phase and the far-from-equilibrium structural state of the reaction product are systematically monitored with XRD and a variety of spectroscopic techniques including Raman spectroscopy, (57)Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The unique extensive oxidation of iron species (Fe(0) → Fe(3+)) with simultaneous reduction of Mo cations (Mo(6+) → Mo(5+)), occuring during the mechanosynthesis of Sr(2)FeMoO(6), is attributed to the mechanically triggered formation of tiny metallic iron nanoparticles in superparamagnetic state with a large reaction surface and a high oxidation affinity, whose steady presence in the reaction mixture of the milled educts initiates/promotes the swift redox reaction. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy observations reveal that the mechanosynthesized Sr(2)FeMoO(6), even after its moderate thermal treatment at 923 K for 30 min in air, exhibits the nanostructured nature with the average particle size of 21(4) nm. At the short-range scale, the nanostructure of the as-prepared Sr(2)FeMoO(6) is characterized by both, the strongly distorted geometry of the constituent FeO(6) octahedra and the extraordinarily high degree of anti-site disorder. The degree of anti-site disorder ASD = 0.5, derived independently from the present experimental XRD, Mössbauer, and SQUID magnetization data, corresponds to the completely random distribution of Fe(3+) and Mo(5+) cations over the sites of octahedral coordination provided by the double perovskite structure. Moreover, the fully anti-site disordered Sr(2)FeMoO(6) nanoparticles exhibit superparamagnetism with the blocking temperature T (B) = 240 K and the deteriorated effective magnetic moment μ = 0.055 μ (B) per formula unit

    Rapamycin-induced Gln3 Dephosphorylation Is Insufficient for Nuclear Localization: Sit4 AND PP2A PHOSPHATASES ARE REGULATED AND FUNCTION DIFFERENTLY*

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    Gln3, the major activator of nitrogen catabolite repression (NCR)-sensitive transcription, is often used as an assay of Tor pathway regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Gln3 is cytoplasmic in cells cultured with repressive nitrogen sources (Gln) and nuclear with derepressive ones (Pro) or after treating Gln-grown cells with the Tor inhibitor, rapamycin (Rap). In Raptreated or Pro-grown cells, Sit4 is posited to dephosphorylate Gln3, which then dissociates from a Gln3-Ure2 complex and enters the nucleus. However, in contrast with this view, Sit4-dependent Gln3 dephosphorylation is greater in Gln than Pro. Investigating this paradox, we show that PP2A (another Tor pathway phosphatase)-dependent Gln3 dephosphorylation is regulated oppositely to that of Sit4, being greatest in Pro- and least in Gln-grown cells. It thus parallels nuclear Gln3 localization and NCR-sensitive transcription. However, because PP2A is not required for nuclear Gln3 localization in Pro, PP2A-dependent Gln3 dephosphorylation and nuclear localization are likely parallel responses to derepressive nitrogen sources. In contrast, Rap-induced nuclear Gln3 localization absolutely requires all four PP2A components (Pph21/22, Tpd3, Cdc55, and Rts1). In pph21Δ22Δ, tpd3Δ, or cdc55Δ cells, however, Gln3 is dephosphorylated to the same level as in Rap-treated wild-type cells, indicating Rap-induced Gln3 dephosphorylation is insufficient to achieve nuclear localization. Finally, PP2A-dependent Gln3 dephosphorylation parallels conditions where Gln3 is mostly nuclear, while Sit4-dependent and Rap-induced dephosphorylation parallels those where Gln3 is mostly cytoplasmic, suggesting the effects of these phosphatases on Gln3 may occur in different cellular compartments
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