55 research outputs found

    Triplet exciton diffusion and phosphorescence quenching in Iridium(III)-Centered dendrimers

    Get PDF
    A study of triplet-triplet exciton annihilation and nonradiative decay in films of iridium(III)-centered phosphorescent dendrimers is reported. The average separation of the chromophore was tuned by the molecular structure and also by blending with a host material. It was found that triplet exciton hopping is controlled by electron exchange interactions and can be over 600 times faster than phosphorescence quenching. Nonradiative decay occurs by weak dipole-dipole interactions and is independent of exciton diffusion, except in very thin films

    Structural Basis for Distinct Binding Properties of the Human Galectins to Thomsen-Friedenreich Antigen

    Get PDF
    The Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF or T) antigen, Galβ1-3GalNAcα1-O-Ser/Thr, is the core 1 structure of O-linked mucin type glycans appearing in tumor-associated glycosylation. The TF antigen occurs in about 90% of human cancer cells and is a potential ligand for the human endogenous galectins. It has been reported that human galectin-1 (Gal-1) and galectin-3 (Gal-3) can perform their cancer-related functions via specifically recognizing TF antigen. However, the detailed binding properties have not been clarified and structurally characterized. In this work, first we identified the distinct TF-binding abilities of Gal-1 and Gal-3. The affinity to TF antigen for Gal-3 is two orders of magnitude higher than that for Gal-1. The structures of Gal-3 carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) complexed with TF antigen and derivatives, TFN and GM1, were then determined. These structures show a unique Glu-water-Arg-water motif-based mode as previously observed in the mushroom galectin AAL. The observation demonstrates that this recognition mode is commonly adopted by TF-binding galectins, either as endogenous or exogenous ones. The detailed structural comparisons between Gal-1 and Gal-3 CRD and mutagenesis experiments reveal that a pentad residue motif (51AHGDA55) at the loop (g1-L4) connecting β-strands 4 and 5 of Gal-1 produces a serious steric hindrance for TF binding. This motif is the main structural basis for Gal-1 with the low affinity to TF antigen. These findings provide the intrinsic structural elements for regulating the TF-binding activity of Gal-1 in some special conditions and also show certain target and approach for mediating some tumor-related bioactivities of human galectins

    A Medicinal Chemist’s Guide to Molecular Interactions

    Get PDF

    Photoinitiated Glycosylation at 350 nm

    No full text

    Carbasugar-thioether pseudodisaccharides related to N-glycan biosynthesis.

    No full text
    Analogues of the alpha-Glcp-(1-->3)-alpha-Glcp and alpha-Glcp-(1-->3)-alpha-Manp disaccharides (representing the two alpha-gluco linkages cleaved by alpha-Glucosidase II in N-glycan biosynthesis) in which the non-reducing-end sugar is replaced by a carbasugar and the inter-glycosidic oxygen by a sulfur were synthesised. The key coupling step was an S(N)2 displacement of an equatorial triflate at C-1 of the carbasugar by C-3 gluco or manno thiolates with inversion of configuration to give thioether pseudodisaccharides with axial substitution at C-1 of the carbasugar. The deprotected pseudodisaccharides failed to inhibit the action of alpha-Glucosidase II as measured both by an in vitro assay and by free oligosaccharide (FOS) analysis from cell studies

    Investigating the effect of steric crowding in phosphorescent dendrimers

    No full text
    A simple convergent procedure has been developed for the formation of sterically encumbered phosphorescent dendrimers. The procedure is demonstrated with the preparation of a first-generation dendrimer composed of a fac-tris(2-phenylpyridyl)iridium(III) core and three dendrons. Each dendron is comprised of a branching phenyl unit with a further four phenyl groups attached. The lack of surface groups on the dendrons was found to reduce solubility and also reduced the level of control over the intermolecular interactions of the emissive and electroactive core in films. The 6-fold decrease in photoluminescence quantum yield in going from solution (69%) to the solid state (11%) showed that there were strong intermolecular interactions of the emissive cores in the solid state. Single-layer devices with the dendrimer blended with 4,4'-bis(N-carbazolyl)biphenyl showed an external quantum efficiency of 1.7% (5.4 cd/A) at 100 cd/m(2) and 11.4 V, giving a power efficiency of 1.5 lm/W
    corecore