20 research outputs found
Noncovalent Modulation of Chemoselectivity in the Gas Phase Leads to a Switchover in Reaction Type from Heterolytic to Homolytic to Electrocyclic Cleavage
In the gas phase, thermal activation of supramolecular assemblies such as host-guest complexes leads commonly to noncovalent dissociation into the individual components. Chemical reactions, for example of encapsulated guest molecules, are only found in exceptional cases. As observed by mass spectrometry, when 1-amino-methyl-2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene (DBOA) is complexed by the macrocycle β-cyclodextrin, its protonated complex undergoes collision-induced dissociation into its components, the conventional reaction pathway. Inside the macrocyclic cavity of cucurbit[7]uril (CB7), a competitive chemical reaction of monoprotonated DBOA takes place upon thermal activation, namely a stepwise homolytic covalent bond cleavage with the elimination of N2 , while the doubly protonated CB7⋅DBOA complex undergoes an inner-phase elimination of ethylene, a concerted, electrocyclic ring-opening reaction. These chemical reaction pathways stand in contrast to the gas-phase chemistry of uncomplexed monoprotonated DBOA, for which an elimination of NH3 predominates upon collision-induced activation, as a heterolytic bond cleavage reaction. The combined results, which can be rationalized in terms of organic-chemical reaction mechanisms and density-function theoretical calculations, demonstrate that chemical reactions in the gas phase can be steered chemoselectively through noncovalent interactions
Prefrontal Cortex Lesions Impair Object-Spatial Integration
How and where object and spatial information are perceptually integrated in the brain is a central question in visual cognition. Single-unit physiology, scalp EEG, and fMRI research suggests that the prefrontal cortex (PFC) is a critical locus for object-spatial integration. To test the causal participation of the PFC in an object-spatial integration network, we studied ten patients with unilateral PFC damage performing a lateralized object-spatial integration task. Consistent with single-unit and neuroimaging studies, we found that PFC lesions result in a significant behavioral impairment in object-spatial integration. Furthermore, by manipulating inter-hemispheric transfer of object-spatial information, we found that masking of visual transfer impairs performance in the contralesional visual field in the PFC patients. Our results provide the first evidence that the PFC plays a key, causal role in an object-spatial integration network. Patient performance is also discussed within the context of compensation by the non-lesioned PFC
Noncovalent Modulation of Chemoselectivity in the Gas Phase Leads to a Switchover in Reaction Type from Heterolytic to Homolytic to Electrocyclic Cleavage
In the gas phase, thermal activation of supramolecular assemblies such as host-guest complexes leads commonly to noncovalent dissociation into the individual components. Chemical reactions, for example of encapsulated guest molecules, are only found in exceptional cases. As observed by mass spectrometry, when 1-amino-methyl-2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene (DBOA) is complexed by the macrocycle b-cyclodextrin, its protonated complex undergoes collision-induced dissociation into its components, the conventional reaction pathway. Inside the macrocyclic cavity of cucurbit[7]uril (CB7), a competitive chemical reaction of monoprotonated DBOA takes place upon thermal activation, namely a stepwise homolytic covalent bond cleavage with the elimination of N2, while the doubly protonated CB7•DBOA complex undergoes an inner-phase elimination of ethylene, a concerted, electrocyclic ring-opening reaction. These chemical reaction pathways stand in contrast to the gas-phase chemistry of uncomplexed monoprotonated DBOA, for which an elimination of NH3 predominates upon collision-induced activation, as a heterolytic bond cleavage reaction. The combined results, which can be rationalized in terms of organic-chemical reaction mechanisms and density-function theoretical calculations, demonstrate that chemical reactions in the gas phase can be steered chemoselectively through noncovalent interactions.peerReviewe
Diffusion-Enhanced Förster Resonance Energy Transfer and the Effects of External Quenchers and the Donor Quantum Yield
The structural and dynamic properties of a flexible peptidic
chain
codetermine its biological activity. These properties are imprinted
in intrachain site-to-site distances as well as in diffusion coefficients
of mutual site-to-site motion. Both distance distribution and diffusion
determine the extent of Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)
between two chain sites labeled with a FRET donor and acceptor. Both
could be obtained from time-resolved FRET measurements if their individual
contributions to the FRET efficiency could be systematically varied.
Because the FRET diffusion enhancement (FDE) depends on the donor-fluorescence
lifetime, it has been proposed that the FDE can be reduced by shortening
the donor lifetime through an external quencher. Benefiting from the
high diffusion sensitivity of short-distance FRET, we tested this
concept experimentally on a (Gly–Ser)<sub>6</sub> segment labeled
with the donor/acceptor pair naphthylalanine/2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]Âoct-2-ene
(NAla/Dbo). Surprisingly, the very effective quencher potassium iodide
(KI) had no effect at all on the average donor–acceptor distance,
although the donor lifetime was shortened from ca. 36 ns in the absence
of KI to ca. 3 ns in the presence of 30 mM KI. We show that the proposed
approach had to fail because it is not the experimentally observed
but the radiative donor lifetime that controls the FDE. Because of
that, any FRET ensemble measurement can easily underestimate diffusion
and might be misleading even if it employs the Haas–Steinberg
diffusion equation (HSE). An extension of traditional FRET analysis
allowed us to evaluate HSE simulations and to corroborate as well
as generalize the experimental results. We demonstrate that diffusion-enhanced
FRET depends on the radiative donor lifetime as it depends on the
diffusion coefficient, a useful symmetry that can directly be applied
to distinguish dynamic and structural effects of viscous cosolvents
on the polymer chain. We demonstrate that the effective FRET rate
and the recovered donor–acceptor distance depend on the quantum
yield, most strongly in the absence of diffusion, which has to be
accounted for in the interpretation of distance trends monitored by
FRET