Boltonheath2832
5-5 μm). The proposed design concepts are applicable from near-infrared to Terahertz regions via structural engineering.Vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) possesses great potential for application as cathode materials for aqueous zinc-ion batteries due to abundant valences of vanadium. Unfortunately, the inferior electronic conductivity and confined interlayer spacing of pristine V2O5 are not able to support fast Zn2+ diffusion kinetics, leading to significant capacity degradation, the dissolution of active species, and unsatisfactory cycling life. Herein, Zn2+ (de)intercalation kinetics is improved by the design of in situ polyaniline (PANI)-intercalated V2O5. The intercalated PANI can not only improve the conductivity and structural stability of V2O5 but also efficiently expand its interlayer spacing (1.41 nm), offering more channels for facile Zn2+ diffusion. Benefiting from these virtues, a high specific capacity of 356 mA h g-1 at 0.1 A g-1 is achieved for the PANI-intercalated V2O5 (PVO) cathode as well as a superior cycling performance (96.3% capacity retention after 1000 cycles at 5 A g-1) in an aqueous electrolyte. Furthermore, the Zn2+ storage in PVO is mainly dominated by the capacitive contribution. This work suggests that intercalating PANI in V2O5 may aid in the future development of advanced cathodes for other multivalent metal ion batteries.Using all-atom explicit solvent replica exchange molecular dynamics simulations, we studied the aggregation of oxidized (ox) Aβ25-35 peptides into dimers mediated by the zwitterionic dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) lipid bilayer. By comparing oxAβ25-35 aggregation with that observed for reduced and phosphorylated Aβ25-35 peptides, we elucidated plausible impact of post-translational modifications on cytotoxicity of Aβ peptides involved in Alzheimer's disease. We found that Met35 oxidation reduces helical propensity in oxAβ25-35 peptides bound to the lipid bilayer and enhances backbone fluctuations. These factors destabilize the wild-type head-to-tail dimer interface and lower the aggregation propensity. Met35 oxidation diversifies aggregation pathways by adding monomeric species to the bound conformational ensemble. The oxAβ25-35 dimer becomes partially expelled from the DMPC bilayer and as a result inflicts limited disruption to the bilayer structure compared to wild-type Aβ25-35. Interestingly, the effect of Ser26 phosphorylation is largely opposite, as it preserves the wild-type head-to-tail aggregation interface and strengthens, not weakens, aggregation propensity. The differing effects can be attributed to the sequence locations of these post-translational modifications, since in contrast to Ser26 phosphorylation, Met35 oxidation directly affects the wild-type C-terminal aggregation interface. A comparison with experimental data is provided.We report herein a novel delivery system, derived from the facile enzymatic synthesis of oligorutin (OR), for cancer cell targeting and pH-responsive drug delivery. In this study, we demonstrate that OR could preferentially penetrate cancer cells via the lipid raft-mediated endocytosis pathway, and cell membrane cholesterol was critical to the internalization of OR. The accumulation of OR in the tumor region was further confirmed by an in vivo biodistribution study. Considering the tumor-targeting property of OR, a pH-responsive drug delivery system (OR-BTZ) was developed by covalent conjugation of the catechol groups on OR with antitumor drug bortezomib (BTZ) through a pH-sensitive borate ester bond. OR-BTZ exerted cytotoxicity as well as inhibition of the migration and invasion to hepatoma carcinoma cells and showed no apparent cytotoxicity with liver normal cells. The OR-BTZs also presented significant therapeutic efficacy and low systematic toxicity in the murine hepatocellular carcinoma model. To our knowledge, this study presents the first attempt to exploit the potential of oligoflavonoids for cancer cell-targeted drug delivery and will motivate the development of flavonoids and their derivatives as a new type of biomaterials for tumor-targeted therapy.ConspectusNatural products are constructed by organisms in impressive ways through various highly selective enzyme-catalyzed chemical reactions. Over the past century, there has been considerable interest in understanding and emulating the underlying biosynthetic logic for the target molecule. The successful implementation of a biomimetic strategy usually has some uniquely valuable benefits over other abiotic routes in total synthesis by (1) corroborating the chemical feasibility of a given biogenetic hypothesis and further unraveling some insightful implications for future biosynthetic studies and (2) providing remarkably more concise access to not only the original synthetic target but also diversified biogenetically related congeners, which may result in either the structural reassignment of previously disclosed natural products or the anticipation of undiscovered natural products. However, for the devised essential biomimetic transformation, fine-tuning the optimization of the substrates and the reaction biosynthetic intermediate LC-KA05 (17) together with its C7-O-deacetylated congeners in all C4/C5-stereochemical variations (18, 127-129), culminating in a need for structural revision to the six-membered lactonic segment in LC-KA05-2. G Protein antagonist The selection and execution of biomimetic strategies in lankacidin total synthesis give rise to all the previously mentioned advantages at the current stage. The modular-based, late-stage diversified complex construction offers an exceptionally high level of synthetic flexibility for future synthetic forays toward newly isolated or chemically modified congeners within the lankacidin family.High-density SnOx and SiOx thin films were deposited via atomic layer deposition (ALD) at low temperatures (100 °C) using tetrakis(dimethylamino)tin(IV) (TDMASn) and di-isopropylaminosilane (DIPAS) as precursors and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and O2 plasma as reactants, respectively. The thin-film encapsulation (TFE) properties of SnOx and SiOx were demonstrated with thickness dependence measurements of the water vapor transmission rate (WVTR) evaluated at 50 °C and 90% relative humidity, and different TFE performance tendencies were observed between thermal and plasma ALD SnOx. The film density, crystallinity, and pinholes formed in the SnOx film appeared to be closely related to the diffusion barrier properties of the film. Based on the above results, a nanolaminate (NL) structure consisting of SiOx and SnOx deposited using plasma-enhanced ALD was measured using WVTR (H2O molecule diffusion) at 2.43 × 10-5 g/m2 day with a 10/10 nm NL structure and time-lag gas permeation measurement (H2 gas diffusion) for applications as passivation layers in various electronic devices.Selective saccharification of cellulose into glucose is a critical step for utilization of lignocellulosic biomass. Molten salt hydrates (MSHs) have shown promising performance in selectively converting cellulose into glucose because of the high solubility of cellulose in the solvent. However, the separation of formed glucose from the MSHs is still a grand challenge. To address this issue, we developed a two-step process, where crystalline cellulose is hydrolyzed into short-chain glucan oligomers in MSHs followed by separation and subsequent hydrolysis of the formed oligomers into glucose under mild conditions. The two-step method provides an easy separation for glucan oligomers from the MSHs without sacrificing the selectivity to glucose. Application of the method for crystalline cellulose is, however, limited to a relatively low concentration, 26.2 mg/mL, because of the formation of byproducts in the MSH that facilitate oligomers degradation. In this work, reactive adsorption was employed to in situ remove oligomers and glucose with an improved yield and efficiency.The usage of exogenous antioxidant materials to relieve oxidative stress offers an important strategy for the therapy of oxidative stress-induced injuries. However, the fabrication processes toward the antioxidant materials usually require the involvement of extra metal ions and organic agents, as well as sophisticated purification steps, which might cause tremendous environmental stress and induce unpredictable side effects in vivo. To address these issues, herein, we proposed a novel strategy to fabricate green nanoparticles for efficiently modulating oxidative stress, which was facilely prepared from tea polyphenol extracts (originated from green tea) via a green enzymatic polymerization-based chemistry method. The resulting nanoparticles possessed a uniform spherical morphology and good stability in water and biomedium and demonstrated excellent radical scavenging properties. These nanoparticle scavengers could effectively prevent intracellular oxidative damage, accelerate wound recovery, and protect the kidneys from reactive oxygen species damaging in the acute kidney injury model. We hope this work will inspire the further development of more types of green nanoparticles for antioxidant therapies via similar synthetic strategies using green biomass materials.Contaminated sediments can negatively affect aquatic organisms and beneficial uses of coastal regions. Monitoring programs typically collect many indicators of sediment toxicity, yet multivariate approaches that comprehensively evaluate data across heterogeneous spatial environments are frequently not performed. In this paper, we explore a multivariate approach to show that a list of suspected drivers of sediment toxicity to native Mytilus galloprovincialis (mussel) and Eohaustorius estuarius (a marine amphipod) population can be narrowed down without excluding samples, and that redundancies in sampling sites can be identified and isolated. Using a 153 × 28 data matrix assembled from a southern California-wide bight monitoring program, we demonstrate by this approach that Port of Los Angeles (PLA) and San Diego Bay (SDB) contained the most toxic sediments in the bight in 2008, the nature of which was unique to each locality. (Note Little toxicity was observed here in 2013 and 2018.) In PLA sediments, mussels were more affected than amphipods, with higher survivability associated with low Hg and Sn levels. Conversely, amphipods had higher mortality than mussel embryos in SDB sediments, with higher survivability associated with low Be and Co levels. Nitrogen, organic content, and finer sediment particles were not related to the survivability of these organisms.Photochemical water oxidation was carried out at a mesoporous nanoparticle film composed of indium tin-doped oxide (nanoITO). Annealing nanoITO at temperatures above 250 °C affects both conducting and semiconducting properties. Impressive photoelectrochemical activity was observed at this degenerate n-type semiconductor electrode, outperforming the traditional semiconductor titanium dioxide (TiO2) under the same conditions. In a 0.1 M HNO3 solution, the nanoITO electrode sustained photocurrents of 1.0 mA/cm2 at an Eapplied = 1.5 V vs saturated calomel electrode (SCE) (η = 0.55 V) under a 90 mW/cm2 UV illumination (375 nm). This activity is compared to ∼0.3 mA/cm2 with a traditional TiO2 electrode under the same potential and conditions. Evidence for oxygen generation in the photolysis experiments was quantified using the collector-generator method, and >70% photocurrent efficiency for O2 production was confirmed at this nanoITO photoanode.