28 research outputs found
Fluorinated benzalkylsilane molecular rectifiers
We report on the synthesis and electrical properties of nine new alkylated silane self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) – (EtO)3Si(CH2)nN = CHPhX where n = 3 or 11 and X = 4-CF[subscript 3], 3,5-CF[subscript 3], 3-F-4-CF[subscript 3], 4-F, or 2,3,4,5,6-F, and explore their rectification behavior in relation to their molecular structure. The electrical properties of the films were examined in a metal/insulator/metal configuration, with a highly-doped silicon bottom contact and a eutectic gallium-indium liquid metal (EGaIn) top contact. The junctions exhibit high yields (>90%), a remarkable resistance to bias stress, and current rectification ratios (R) between 20 and 200 depending on the structure, degree of order, and internal dipole of each molecule. We found that the rectification ratio correlates positively with the strength of the molecular dipole moment and it is reduced with increasing molecular length.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Award ECCS 1254757)Wake Forest University (Pilot Research Grant
Photoinitiated Nitric Oxide-Releasing Tertiary S -Nitrosothiol-Modified Xerogels
The synthesis of a tertiary thiol-bearing silane precursor (i.e., N-acetyl penicillamine propyltrimethoxysilane or NAPTMS) to enable enhanced NO storage stability at physiological temperature is described. The novel silane was co-condensed with alkoxy- and alkylalkoxysilanes under varied synthetic parameters (e.g., water to silane ratio, catalyst and solvent concentrations, and reaction time) to evaluate systematically the formation of stable xerogel films. The resulting xerogels were subsequently nitrosated to yield tertiary RSNO-modified coatings. Total NO storage ranged from 0.87–1.78 µmol cm−2 depending on the NAPTMS concentration and xerogel coating thickness. Steric hindrance near the nitroso functionality necessitated the use of photolysis to liberate NO. The average NO flux for irradiated xerogels in physiological buffer at 37 °C was ~23 pmol cm−2 s−1 (20% NAPTMS balance TEOS xerogel film cast using 30 µL). The biomedical utility of the photo-initiated NO-releasing films was illustrated by their ability to both reduce Pseudomonas aeruginosa adhesion by ~90% relative to control interfaces and eradicate the adhered bacteria
Examination of bacterial resistance to exogenous nitric oxide
While much research has been directed to harnessing the antimicrobial properties of exogenous NO, the possibility of bacteria developing resistance to such therapy has not been thoroughly studied. Herein, we evaluate potential NO resistance using spontaneous and serial passage mutagenesis assays. Specifically, Staphylococcus aureus, Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherichia coli, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were systematically exposed to NO-releasing 75mol% MPTMS-TEOS nitrosothiol particles at or below minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) levels. In the spontaneous mutagenesis assay, bacteria that survived exposure to lethal concentrations of NO showed no increase in MIC. Similarly, no increase in MIC was observed in the serial passage mutagenesis assay after exposure of these species to sub-inhibitory concentrations of NO through 20 d
Calcium Binding Properties of the Kingella kingae PilC1 and PilC2 Proteins Have Differential Effects on Type IV Pilus-Mediated Adherence and Twitching Motility
Kingella kingae is an emerging bacterial pathogen that is being recognized increasingly as an important etiology of septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, and bacteremia, especially in young children. The pathogenesis of K. kingae disease begins with bacterial adherence to respiratory epithelium, which is dependent on type IV pili and is influenced by two PilC-like proteins called PilC1 and PilC2. Production of either PilC1 or PilC2 is necessary for K. kingae piliation and bacterial adherence. In this study, we set out to further investigate the role of PilC1 and PilC2 in type IV pilus-associated phenotypes. We found that PilC1 contains a functional 9-amino-acid calcium-binding (Ca-binding) site with homology to the Pseudomonas aeruginosa PilY1 Ca-binding site and that PilC2 contains a functional 12-amino-acid Ca-binding site with homology to the human calmodulin Ca-binding site. Using targeted mutagenesis to disrupt the Ca-binding sites, we demonstrated that the PilC1 and PilC2 Ca-binding sites are dispensable for piliation. Interestingly, we showed that the PilC1 site is necessary for twitching motility and adherence to Chang epithelial cells, while the PilC2 site has only a minor influence on twitching motility and no influence on adherence. These findings establish key differences in PilC1 and PilC2 function in K. kingae and provide insights into the biology of the PilC-like family of proteins
Non-Interactive Non-Malleability from Quantum Supremacy
We construct non-interactive non-malleable commitments without setup in the plain model, under well-studied assumptions.
First, we construct non-interactive non-malleable commitments with respect to commitment for tags for a small constant , under the following assumptions:
- Sub-exponential hardness of factoring or discrete log.
- Quantum sub-exponential hardness of learning with errors (LWE).
Second, as our key technical contribution, we introduce a new tag amplification technique. We show how to convert any non-interactive non-malleable commitment with respect to commitment for tags (for any constant ) into a non-interactive non-malleable commitment with respect to replacement for tags. This part only assumes the existence of sub-exponentially secure non-interactive witness indistinguishable (NIWI) proofs, which can be based on sub-exponential security of the decisional linear assumption.
Interestingly, for the tag amplification technique, we crucially rely on the leakage lemma due to Gentry and Wichs (STOC 2011). For the construction of non-malleable commitments for tags, we rely on quantum supremacy. This use of quantum supremacy in classical cryptography is novel, and we believe it will have future applications. We provide one such application to two-message witness indistinguishable (WI) arguments from (quantum) polynomial hardness assumptions
Photoinitiated Nitric Oxide-Releasing Tertiary <i>S</i>-Nitrosothiol-Modified Xerogels
The synthesis of a tertiary thiol-bearing silane precursor
(i.e., <i>N</i>-acetyl penicillamine propyltrimethoxysilane
or NAPTMS)
to enable enhanced NO storage stability at physiological temperature
is described. The novel silane was co-condensed with alkoxy- or alkylalkoxysilanes
under varied synthetic parameters (e.g., water to silane ratio, catalyst
and solvent concentrations, and reaction time) to evaluate systematically
the formation of stable xerogel films. The resulting xerogels were
subsequently nitrosated to yield tertiary RSNO-modified coatings.
Total NO storage ranged from 0.87 to 1.78 μmol cm<sup>–2</sup> depending on the NAPTMS concentration and xerogel coating thickness.
Steric hindrance near the nitroso functionality necessitated the use
of photolysis to liberate NO. The average NO flux for irradiated xerogels
(20% NAPTMS balance TEOS xerogel film cast using 30 μL) in physiological
buffer at 37 °C was ∼23 pmol cm<sup>–2</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>. The biomedical utility of the photoinitiated NO-releasing
films was illustrated by their ability to both reduce <i>Pseudomonas
aeruginosa</i> adhesion by ∼90% relative to control interfaces
and eradicate the adhered bacteria
Role of Size and Shape on Biofilm Eradication for Nitric Oxide-Releasing Silica Nanoparticles
Nitric
oxide (NO), a reactive free radical, has proven effective
in eradicating bacterial biofilms with reduced risk of fostering antibacterial
resistance. Herein, we evaluated the efficacy of NO-releasing silica
nanoparticles against Gram-negative <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> and Gram-positive <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> biofilms
as a function of particle size and shape. Three sizes of NO-releasing
silica nanoparticles (i.e., 14, 50, and 150 nm) with identical total
NO release (∼0.3 μmol/mg) were utilized to study antibiofilm
eradication as a function of size. To observe the role of particle
shape on biofilm killing, we varied the aspect ratio of the NO-releasing
silica particles from 1 to 8 while maintaining constant particle volume
(∼0.02 μm<sup>3</sup>) and NO-release totals (∼0.7
μmol/mg). Nitric oxide-releasing particles with decreased size
and increased aspect ratio were more effective against both <i>P. aeruginosa</i> and <i>S. aureus</i> biofilms, with
the Gram-negative species exhibiting the greatest susceptibility to
NO. To further understand the influence of these nanoparticle properties
on NO-mediated antibacterial activity, we visualized intracellular
NO concentrations and cell death with confocal microscopy. Smaller
NO-releasing particles (14 nm) exhibited better NO delivery and enhanced
bacteria killing compared to the larger (50 and 150 nm) particles.
Likewise, the rod-like NO-releasing particles proved more effective
than spherical particles in delivering NO and inducing greater antibacterial
action throughout the biofilm