22 research outputs found

    N-Glycans and Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-Anchor Act on Polarized Sorting of Mouse PrPC in Madin-Darby Canine Kidney Cells

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    The cellular prion protein (PrPC) plays a fundamental role in prion disease. PrPC is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein with two variably occupied N-glycosylation sites. In general, GPI-anchor and N-glycosylation direct proteins to apical membranes in polarized cells whereas the majority of mouse PrPC is found in basolateral membranes in polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. In this study we have mutated the first, the second, and both N-glycosylation sites of PrPC and also replaced the GPI-anchor of PrPC by the Thy-1 GPI-anchor in order to investigate the role of these signals in sorting of PrPC in MDCK cells. Cell surface biotinylation experiments and confocal microscopy showed that lack of one N-linked oligosaccharide leads to loss of polarized sorting of PrPC. Exchange of the PrPC GPI-anchor for the one of Thy-1 redirects PrPC to the apical membrane. In conclusion, both N-glycosylation and GPI-anchor act on polarized sorting of PrPC, with the GPI-anchor being dominant over N-glycans

    Detecting and utilizing minority phases in heterogeneous catalysis

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    Highly active phases in carbon monoxide oxidation are known, however they are transient in nature. Here, we determined for the first time the structure of such a highly active phase on platinum nanoparticles in an actual reactor. Unlike generally assumed, the surface of this phase is virtually free of adsorbates and co-exists with carbon-monoxide covered and surface oxidized platinum. Understanding the relation between gas composition and catalyst structure at all times and locations within a reactor enabled the rational design of a reactor concept, which maximizes the amount of the highly active phase and minimizes the amount of platinum needed

    Non-conventional Ce: YAG nanostructures via urea complexes

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    Ce:YAG nanostructures (Ce:YAG\u2009=\u2009Cerium in Yttrium Aluminium Garnet), easy to control and shape, have been prepared via templating approach using natural and synthetic materials (i.e. paper, cotton wool and glass wool) previously soaked with a gel-like metals precursor and then thermally treated to achieve the wished morphology. The final material, otherwise difficult to process, can be easily moulded, it is lightweight, portable and forms, at the nanoscale, homogeneous layers of interconnected but not agglomerated nanoparticles (15\u2009\ub1\u20095\u2009nm). Using the same synthetic route, called Urea-Glass-Route, but in absence of a template, extremely pure Ce:YAG nanoparticle (45\u2009\ub1\u20095\u2009nm) can be also prepared, highly crystalline and well-defined in size and shape. Both structural and optical properties of the final materials were investigated, showing high optical quality. The support allows the production of a multifunctional material with mouldable shape and potential lighting application for large structures combining the strength, chemical durability, fire resistance, and translucency of glass fibres. Last, but not least, the synthetic path also allows an easy scaling up of the process: the first, key step for practical application of nanosized rare-earth doped YAG on large scal

    Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering (RIXS) Studies in Chemistry : Present and Future

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    This chapter illustrates how resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) is used to address questions in chemistry, with special focus on the electronic structure and catalytic activity of first row transition metals. RIXS is a two-photon process that is the x-ray equivalent of resonance Raman spectroscopy. The final states correspond to vibrational, valence electronic or even core excitations. In addition to the advantages of a local element-selective x-ray spectroscopic probe, RIXS gives new information compared to single-photon x-ray absorption and x-ray emission experiments. Metal L-edge RIXS shows intense metal-centered ligand- field transitions, even in cases where they are spin or parity forbidden in optical absorption spectroscopy. By selecting different resonances by appropriately tuning the incident energy, it is possible to isolate different ligand-field and charge-transfer transitions. The observation of a large number of electronic states that can be properly assigned, sometimes with the help of theoretical methods, gives novel opportunities to quantify metal-ligand interactions and their contributions to reactivity. RIXS in the K pre-edge can be used to obtain L- and M-edge like spectra including insight into charge-transfer excitations all with the advantages of a hard x-ray probe. Finally, it is shown how time-resolved RIXS down to the femtosecond timescale probes the orbitals of transient reaction intermediates. The usefulness of RIXS in chemistry is shown for a diverse set of systems, including coordination complexes, metal enzymes, and nanoparticles
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