144 research outputs found
Molecular Tweezers with Varying Anions: A Comparative Study
Selective binding of the phosphate-substituted molecular tweezer 1a to protein lysine residues was suggested to explain the inhibition of certain enzymes and the aberrant aggregation of amyloid petide AÎČ42 or α-synuclein, which are assumed to be responsible for Alzheimerâs and Parkinsonâs disease, respectively. In this work we systematically investigated the binding of four water-soluble tweezers 1aâd (substituted by phosphate, methanephosphonate, sulfate, or O-methylenecarboxylate groups) to amino acids and peptides containing lysine or arginine residues by using fluorescence spectroscopy, NMR spectroscopy, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The comparison of the experimental results with theoretical data obtained by a combination of QM/MM and ab initio 1H NMR shift calculations provides clear evidence that the tweezers 1aâc bind the amino acid or peptide guest molecules by threading the lysine or arginine side chain through the tweezersâ cavity, whereas in the case of 1d the guest molecule is preferentially positioned outside the tweezerâs cavity. Attractive ionic, CH-Ï, and hydrophobic interactions are here the major binding forces. The combination of experiment and theory provides deep insight into the hostâguest binding modes, a prerequisite to understanding the exciting influence of these tweezers on the aggregation of proteins and the activity of enzymes
Molecular Tweezers Inhibit Islet Amyloid Polypeptide Assembly and Toxicity by a New Mechanism
In type-2 diabetes (T2D), islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) self-associates into toxic assemblies causing islet ÎČ-cell death. Therefore, preventing IAPP toxicity is a promising therapeutic strategy for T2D. The molecular tweezer CLR01 is a supramolecular tool for selective complexation of K residues in (poly)peptides. Surprisingly, it inhibits IAPP aggregation at substoichiometric concentrations even though IAPP has only one K residue at position 1, whereas efficient inhibition of IAPP toxicity requires excess CLR01. The basis for this peculiar behavior is not clear. Here, a combination of biochemical, biophysical, spectroscopic, and computational methods reveals a detailed mechanistic picture of the unique dual inhibition mechanism for CLR01. At low concentrations, CLR01 binds to K1, presumably nucleating nonamyloidogenic, yet toxic, structures, whereas excess CLR01 binds also to R11, leading to nontoxic structures. Encouragingly, the CLR01 concentrations needed for inhibition of IAPP toxicity are safe in vivo, supporting its development toward disease-modifying therapy for T2D
Understanding the decomposition reaction mechanism of chrysanthemic acid: a computational study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Chrysanthemic acid (<b>CHA</b>) is a major product from the photodecomposition of pyrethrin which is an important class of pesticide compounds.</p> <p>In the following paper, Hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the potential energy surface (PES) for three possible channels decomposition of chrysanthemic acid <b>(</b>cis-trans isomerization, rearrangement and fragmentation) have been carried at the B3LYP/6-311+G** level of theory. DFT was employed to optimize the geometry parameters of the reactants, transition states, intermediates and products based on detailed potential energy surfaces (PES).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our results suggest that all three pathways of <b>CHA </b>are endothermic. DFT calculations revealed that the activation barriers for cis-trans isomerization are low, leading to a thermodynamically favorable process than other two pathways. We also investigated the solvent effect on the PES using the polarizable continuum model (PCM). In addition, time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations showed that these reactions occur in the ground state rather than in an excited state.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The rearrangement process seems to be more favorable than the decomposition of <b>CHA </b>to carbene formation. The solvent effect calculations indicated no changes in the shape of the PES with three continua (water, ethanol and cyclohexane), although the solvents tend to stabilize all of the species.</p
Special electronic structures and quantum conduction of B/P co-doping carbon nanotubes under electric field using the first principle
Boron (B)/phosphorus (P) doped single wall carbon nanotubes (B-PSWNTs) are
studied by using the First- Principle method based on density function theory
(DFT). Mayer bond order, band structure, electrons density and density of
states are calculated. It concludes that the B-PSWNTs have special band
structure which is quite different from BN nanotubes, and that metallic carbon
nanotubes will be converted to semiconductor due to boron/phosphorus co-doping
which breaks the symmetrical structure. The bonding forms in B-PSWNTs are
investigated in detail. Besides, Mulliken charge population and the quantum
conductance are also calculated to study the quantum transport characteristics
of B-PSWNT hetero-junction. It is found that the position of p-n junction in
this hetero-junction will be changed as the applied electric field increase and
it performs the characteristics of diode.Comment: 11 pages, 6 fiugres, 2 table
Cell entry of a host targeting protein of oomycetes requires gp96
This work is supported by the [European Communityâs] Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007â2013] under grant agreement no. [238550] (L.L., J.D.-U., C.J.S., P.v.W.); BBSRC [BBE007120/1, BB/J018333/1 and BB/G012075/1] (F.T., I.d.B., C.J.S., S.W., P.v.W.); Newton Global Partnership Award [BB/N005058/1] (F.T., P.v.W.), the University of Aberdeen (A.D.T., T.R., C.J.S., P.v.W.) and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [CRC1093] (P.B., T.S.). We would like to acknowledge the Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia for funding INA. We would like to thank Brian Haas for his bioinformatics support. We would like to acknowledge Neil Gow and Johannes van den Boom for critical reading of the manuscript. We would like to acknowledge Svetlana Rezinciuc for technical help with pH-studies.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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Sequence-selective assembly of tweezer-molecules on linear templates enables frameshift-reading of sequence information
Monomer-sequence information in synthetic copolyimides can be recognised by tweezer-type molecules binding to adjacent triplet-sequences on the polymer chains. In the present paper different tweezer-molecules are found to have different sequence-selectivities, as demonstrated in solution by 1H NMR spectroscopy and in the solid state by single crystal X-ray analyses of tweezer-complexes with linear and macrocyclic oligo-imides. This work provides clear-cut confirmation of polyimide chain-folding and adjacent-tweezer-binding. It also reveals a new and entirely unexpected mechanism for sequence-recognition which, by analogy with a related process in biomolecular information processing, may be termed "frameshift-reading". The ability of one particular tweezer-molecule to detect, with exceptionally high sensitivity, long-range sequence-information in chain-folding aromatic copolyimides, is readily explained by this novel process
The Lys-Specific Molecular Tweezer, CLR01, Modulates Aggregation of the Mutant p53 DNA Binding Domain and Inhibits Its Toxicity
Origin of the Preference for the Orbital Symmetry Forbidden Stereochemistry of the 1,5-Sigmatropic Shift of Substituted Norcaradienes
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