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Solar-driven reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation is an attractive disinfection technique for cell death and water purification. However, most photocatalysts require high stability in the water environment and the production of ROS with a sufficient amount and diffusion length to damage pathogens. Here, a ROS generation system was developed consisting of tapered crystalline silicon microwires coated with anatase titanium dioxide for a conformal junction. The system effectively absorbed >95% of sunlight over 300-1100 nm, resulting in effective ROS generation. The system was designed to produce various ROS species, but a logistic regression analysis with cellular survival data revealed that the diffusion length of the ROS is ∼9 μm, implying that the most dominant species causing cell damage is H2O2. Surprisingly, a quantitative analysis showed that only 15 min of light irradiation on the system would catalyze a local bactericidal effect comparable to the conventional germicidal level of H2O2 (∼3 mM).An efficient and regioselective synthesis of highly substituted 2-trifluoromethyl pyrrole derivatives via silver-catalyzed cyclization of vinyl azides with ethyl 4,4,4-trifluoro-3-oxobutanoate is reported. Various α-(heteo)aryl, alkyl, β-aryl, as well as α,β-disubstituted vinyl azides, participate in this transformation. The reaction mechanism likely involves the addition of in situ generated 2H-azirine to the diketone species, followed by intramolecular addition, N-C1 cleavage, and elimination.LSSmOrange is a fluorescent protein that exhibits a large energy gap between absorption and emission, which makes it a useful tool for multicolor bioimaging. This characteristic of LSSmOrange originates from excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) The neutral chromophore is predominantly present in the ground state while the bright fluorescence is emitted from the anionic excited state after ESPT. Interestingly, it was reported that this ESPT process follows bimodal dynamics, but its origin has not clearly been understood. We investigate ESPT of LSSmOrange using time-resolved impulsive stimulated Raman spectroscopy (TR-ISRS) that provides femtosecond time-resolved Raman spectra. The results indicate that the bimodal ESPT dynamics originates from the structural heterogeneity of the chromophore. Species-associated Raman spectra obtained by spectral analysis based on singular value decomposition (SVD) suggest that cis and trans chromophores coexist in the ground state. It is considered that these two forms are photoexcited and undergo ESPT in parallel, resulting in the bimodal dynamics of ESPT in LSSmOrange.There has been intense interest in developing orally bioavailable SERDs, energized by the recent discovery of treatment-resistant ESR1 mutations. Overcoming the two decades long challenge of combining all the desirable activities and properties into one molecule, GDC-9545 (giredestrant) was identified with an exceptional preclinical profile. This Viewpoint seeks to place this molecule in the historical context of previously reported oral SERDs and highlights the exciting clinical potential for a best-in-class oral SERD.Ultrafast infrared vibrational spectroscopy is widely used for the investigation of dynamics in systems from water to model membranes. Because the experimental observation window is limited to a few times the probe's vibrational lifetime, a frequent obstacle for the measurement of a broad time range is short molecular vibrational lifetimes (typically a few to tens of picoseconds). Five new long-lifetime aromatic selenocyanate vibrational probes have been synthesized and their vibrational properties characterized. These probes are compared to commercial phenyl selenocyanate. The vibrational lifetimes range between ∼400 and 500 ps in complex solvents, which are some of the longest room-temperature vibrational lifetimes reported to date. In contrast to vibrations that are long-lived in simple solvents such as CCl4, but become much shorter in complex solvents, the probes discussed here have ∼400 ps lifetimes in complex solvents and even longer in simple solvents. One of them has a remarkable lifetime of 1235 ps in CCl4. These probes have a range of molecular sizes and geometries that can make them useful for placement into different complex materials due to steric reasons, and some of them have functionalities that enable their synthetic incorporation into larger molecules, such as industrial polymers. We investigated the effect of a range of electron-donating and electron-withdrawing para-substituents on the vibrational properties of the CN stretch. The probes have a solvent-independent linear relationship to the Hammett substituent parameter when evaluated with respect to the CN vibrational frequency and the ipso 13C NMR chemical shift.Singlet fission (SF), the photophysical process in which one singlet exciton is transformed into two triplets, depends inter alia on the coupling of electronic states. Here, we use fluorination and the resulting changes in partial charge distribution across the chromophore backbone as a particularly powerful tool to control this parameter in pentacene. We find that the introduction of a permanent dipole moment leads to an enhanced coupling of Frenkel exciton and charge transfer states and to an increased SF rate which we probed using ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy. These findings are contrasted with H-aggregate formation and a significantly reduced triplet-pair state lifetime in a fluorinated pentacene for which the different partial charge distribution leads to a negligible dipole moment.The interfacial properties of surfactant solutions are closely related to the micellization of surfactants. Temperature, salt type and concentration, pH, and other parameters affecting the micellization of surfactants have all been extensively investigated previously. However, the effect of dissolved gas on surfactant micellization and associated interfacial properties' transformations is not completely understood yet. In this study, sodium oleate (NaOl) was chosen as the research object, and the role of gas/gas nucleation in NaOl micellization was systematically investigated. The results indicated that the solution changed to be more turbid and the dissolved oxygen content increased after NaOl solutions were subjected to compression-decompression treatments. Meanwhile, the surface tension of the NaOl solution was altered, which was more pronounced when the concentration of NaOl was close to the critical micelle concentration. Given that the surface tension was a good indicator of the assembly and distribution state of the soluble monomers and insoluble micelles of NaOl, interactions between nucleated bubbles originating from the gas nucleation and NaOl molecules were unveiled through the analysis of the size distribution and zeta potential of sub-micro- and nanoscale particles in bulk solutions. Finally, possible micellization models of NaOl molecules, fully considering the role of gas/gas nucleation, were proposed under varying NaOl concentration conditions.The capsids of RNA viruses such as MS2 are great models for studying protein self-assembly because they are made almost entirely of multiple copies of a single coat protein (CP). Although CP is the minimal repeating unit of the capsid, previous studies have shown that CP exists as a homodimer (CP2) even in an acid-disassembled system, indicating that CP2 is an obligate dimer. Here, we investigate the molecular basis of this obligate dimerization using coarse-grained structure-based models and molecular dynamics simulations. We find that, unlike monomeric proteins of similar size, CP populates a single partially folded ensemble whose "foldedness" is sensitive to denaturing conditions. In contrast, CP2 folds similarly to single-domain proteins populating only the folded and the unfolded ensembles, separated by a prominent folding free energy barrier. Several intramonomer contacts form early, but the CP2 folding barrier is crossed only when the intermonomer contacts are made. A dissection of the structure of CP2 through mutant folding simulations shows that the folding barrier arises both from the topology of CP and the interface contacts of CP2. Together, our results show that CP2 is an obligate dimer because of kinetic stability, that is, dimerization induces a folding barrier and that makes it difficult for proteins in the dimer minimum to partially unfold and access the monomeric state without completely unfolding. We discuss the advantages of this obligate dimerization in the context of dimer design and virus stability.The total syntheses of aspidospermidine, N-methylaspidospermidine, N-acetylaspidospermidine, and aspidospermine were achieved from a common pentacyclic indoline intermediate. The common pentacyclic indoline intermediate was synthesized on a gram scale through a Stork-enamine alkylation of 1H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]carbazole derivatives, which were prepared through a Brønsted acid-catalyzed tandem cyclization of tryptamine-ynamide. The scalable synthesis of 1H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]carbazole afforded facile access and a practical approach to the Aspidosperma indole alkaloid family.Lithium-rich layered oxides appear in most roadmaps as next generation Li-ion cathode materials owing to their superior capacity. Within this family, Li2MnO3 represents the archetype material and is often taken as model compound to better understand the complex structural modifications occurring in the first charging cycle. In this work, density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been used to understand the impact of stacking faults in the structural transformations occurring in Li2MnO3 upon delithiation, which are found to hinder the phase transformations leading to structural degradation. The formation energies of both ideal and defective LixMnO3 compositions and the analysis of the encountered ground states have been used to rationalize the predicted differences in terms of structural evolution. From the understanding of the origin in the O1 phase transformation, Mg substitution is proposed as alternative strategy to improve the structural stability in this family of materials.Understanding how lithium interacts with complex biosystems is crucial for uncovering the roles of this alkali metal in biology and designing extraction techniques for battery production and environmental remediation. In this light, fundamental information about Li+ binding to nucleic acids is required. Herein, a new database of Li+-nucleic acid interactions is presented that contains CCSD(T)/CBS benchmark energies for all nucleobase and phosphate binding locations. this website Furthermore, the performance of 54 DFT functionals in combination with three triple-zeta (TZ) basis sets (6-311+G(3df,2p), aug-cc-pVTZ, and def2-TZVPP) is tested. The results identify a range of functionals across different families (B2-PLYP, PBE-QIDH, ωB97, ωB97X-D, MN15, B3PW91, B97-2, TPSS, BP86-D3(BJ), and PBE) that can accurately describe coordinated Li+-nucleic acid interactions, with the average mean percent error (AMPE) across binding positions and basis sets being below 2%. Nevertheless, only three functionals tested (B2-PLYP, PBE-QIDH, and ωB97X-D) preserve this accuracy for metal cation-π interactions, suggesting that caution is warranted when choosing a functional to describe a diverse range of Li+-nucleic acid complexes.

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