Hanrose5786
Structurally variable organochalcogen clusters containing palladium(II) and nickel(II) ions were assembled starting from the salicylidene-substituted dichalcogenides (Y-C6H4-N═CH-C6H4-OH)2 (HLY2, where Y = Se or Te), and palladium or nickel acetate. The tetrameric palladium clusters contain reduced chalcogenolato ligands Y-C6H4-N═CH-C6H4-O)2- (L'Y2-, where Y = Se or Te), while the initially formed trimeric nickel clusters contain the intact, coordinated dichalcogenides. The palladium clusters have a general formula of [Pd4(L'Y)4] and represent the first examples of palladium complexes where both a gyrobifastigial and a pseudocubane arrangement of the central Pd4Y4 unit could be established with the same ligand, only depending on the solvents used for crystallization. Reduced density gradient (RDG) considerations based on density functional theory calculations suggest that the commonly referred to stabilizing chalcogen-palladium or palladium-palladium interactions for the two geometric arrangements are wboth the palladium and nickel clusters indicate that they show fluctional behavior with varying nuclearity in solution and can adopt multiple charge states especially because of the noninnocence of the chalcogen-based ligands. The complexes were fully characterized by spectroscopic methods, elemental analyses, and X-ray diffraction.Naturally occurring protein nanocages are promising drug carriers because of their uniform size and biocompatibility. Engineering efforts have enhanced the delivery properties of nanocages, but cell specificity and high drug loading remain major challenges. Herein, we fused the SpyTag peptide to the surface of engineered E2 nanocages to enable tunable nanocage decoration and effective E2 cell targeting using a variety of SpyCatcher (SC) fusion proteins. Additionally, the core of the E2 nanocage incorporated four phenylalanine mutations previously shown to allow hydrophobic loading of doxorubicin and pH-responsive release in acidic environments. We functionalized the surface of the nanocage with a highly cell-specific epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeting protein conjugate, 4GE11-mCherry-SC, developed previously in our laboratories by employing unnatural amino acid (UAA) protein engineering chemistries. Herein, we demonstrated the benefits of this engineered protein nanocage construct for efficient drug loading, with a straightforward method for removal of the unloaded drug through elastin-like polypeptide-mediated inverse transition cycling. Additionally, we demonstrated approximately 3-fold higher doxorubicin internalization in inflammatory breast cancer cells compared to healthy breast epithelial cells, leading to targeted cell death at concentrations below the IC50 of free doxorubicin. Collectively, these results demonstrated the versatility of our UAA-based EGFR-targeting protein construct to deliver a variety of cargoes efficiently, including engineered E2 nanocages capable of site-specific functionalization and doxorubicin loading.Mycoplasma gallisepticum (Mgal) is a common pathogen of poultry worldwide that has recently spread to North American house finches after a single host shift in 1994. The molecular determinants of Mgal virulence and host specificity are still largely unknown, mostly due to the absence of efficient methods for functional genomics. After evaluating two exogenous recombination systems derived from phages found in the phylogenetically related Spiroplasma phoeniceum and the more distant Bacillus subtilis, the RecET-like system from B. subtilis was successfully used for gene inactivation and targeted replacement in Mgal. In a second step, the Cre-lox recombination system was used for the removal of the antibiotic resistance marker in recombinant mutants. This study therefore describes the first genetic tool for targeted genome engineering of Mgal and demonstrates the efficiency of heterologous recombination systems in minimal bacteria.Efficient and versatile DNA assembly frameworks have had an impact on promoting synthetic biology to build complex biological systems. To accelerate system development, laboratory automation (or biofoundry) provides an opportunity to construct organisms and DNA assemblies via computer-aided design. However, a modular cloning (MoClo) system for multiple DNA assemblies limits the biofoundry workflow in terms of simplicity and feasibility by preparing the number of cloning materials such as destination vectors prior to the automation process. Herein, we propose robot-assisted MoClo (RoboMoClo) to accelerate a synthetic biology project with multiple gene expressions at the biofoundry. The architecture of the RoboMoClo framework provides a hybrid strategy of hierarchical gene assembly and iterative gene assembly, and fewer destination vectors compared with other MoClo systems. An industrial bacterium, Corynebacterium glutamicum, was used as a model host for RoboMoClo. After building a biopart library (promoter and terminator; level 0) and evaluating its features (level 1), various transcriptional directions in multiple gene assemblies (level 2) were studied using the RoboMoClo vectors. Among the constructs, the convergent construct exhibited potential transcriptional interference through the collision of RNA polymerases. To study design of experiment-guided lycopene biosynthesis in C. glutamicum (levels 1, 2, and 3), the biofoundry-assisted multiple gene assembly was demonstrated as a proof-of-concept by constructing various sub-pathway units (level 2) and pathway units (level 3) for C. glutamicum. The RoboMoClo framework provides an improved MoClo toolkit for laboratory automation in a synthetic biology application.Several studies have reported ionization methods to classify the chemical composition of levitated particles held in an electrodynamic balance using mass spectrometry (MS). These methods include electrospray-based paper spray (PS) ionization, plasma discharge ionization, and direct analysis in real-time (DART) ionization, with each showing advantages and disadvantages. Our recent work demonstrated that PS ionization could yield accurate data for the chemical evolution of mixed component particles undergoing evaporation. However, measurements were performed using an internal standard to account for and correct the inherent variability in the PS ionization source. selleck inhibitor Here, we explore a new electrospray-based method coupled to particle levitation-the Open Port Sampling Interface (OPSI), which provides many advantages over the PS method, with few disadvantages. In this application note we report experiments in which micron-sized particles, containing analytes such as citric acid, maleic acid, and tetraethylene glycol, were levitated and optically probed to determine their size and mass. Subsequent transfer of individual levitated particles into the OPSI allowed for the ionization and mass spectrometry analysis of these particles. We discuss the stability and reproducibility of MS measurements, demonstrate effective quantitation in both positive and negative mode, and determine the sensitivity of the OPSI to a range of analyte mass present in levitated particles. Importantly, we show stability of the OPSI over >6 h without the need for normalizing signal variations with an internal standard in the sample, demonstrating robust application of the OPSI to measurements over extended periods of time.With the rising demand for information security, there has been a surge of interest in harnessing the intrinsic physical properties of device for designing a secure logic circuit. Here we provide an innovative approach to realize the secure optoelectronic logic circuit based on nonvolatile van der Waals (vdW) heterostructure phototransistors. The phototransistors comprising WSe2 and h-BN flakes exhibit electrical tunability of nonvolatile conductance under cooperative operations of electrical and light stimulus. This intriguing feature allows the phototransistor to work as a building block for the design of secure optoelectronic logic circuit in which the information encryption can be directly achieved with a designed secret key. On the basis of this approach, we assemble two phototransistors into an optoelectronic hybrid circuit and implement a functionally complete set of logic gates (i.e., NOR, XOR, and NAND) in a reconfigurable manner. Our findings highlight the potential of nonvolatile phototransistors for the development of reconfigurable secure optoelectronic circuits.The Stockholm Convention is key to addressing the global threats of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) to humanity and the environment. It has been successful in identifying new POPs, but its national implementation remains challenging, particularly by low- and middle-income Parties. Concerted action is needed to assist Parties in implementing the Convention's obligations. This analysis aims to identify and recommend research and scientific support needed for timely implementation of the Convention. We aim this analysis at scientists and experts from a variety of natural and social sciences and from all sectors (academia, civil society, industry, and government institutions), as well as research funding agencies. Further, we provide practical guidance to scientists and experts to promote the visibility and accessibility of their work for the Convention's implementation, followed by recommendations for sustaining scientific support to the Convention. This study is the first of a series on analyzing policy needs for scientific evidence under global governance on chemicals and waste.Electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) yielding value-added chemicals provides a sustainable approach for renewable energy storage and conversion. Bismuth-based catalysts prove to be promising candidates for converting CO2 and water into formate but still suffer from poor selectivity and activity and/or sluggish kinetics. Here, we report that ultrathin porous Bi nanosheets (Bi-PNS) can be prepared through a controlled solvothermal protocol. Compared with smooth Bi nanoparticles (Bi-NPs), the ultrathin, rough, and porous Bi-PNS provide more active sites with higher intrinsic reactivities for CO2RR. Moreover, such high activity further increases the local pH in the vicinity of the catalyst surfaces during electrolysis and thus suppresses the competing hydrogen evolution reaction. As a result, the Bi-PNS exhibit significantly boosted CO2RR properties, showing a Faradaic efficiency of 95% with an effective current density of 45 mA cm-2 for formate evolution at the potential of -1.0 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode.Three copper dibenzoporphyrin(2.1.2.1) complexes having two dipyrromethene units connected through o-phenylen bridges and 4-MePh, Ph, or F5Ph substituents at the meso positions of the dipyrrins were synthesized and characterized according to their spectral, electrochemical, and structural properties. As indicated by the single-crystal X-ray structures, all three derivatives have highly bent molecular structures, with angles between each planar dipyrrin unit ranging from 89° to 85°, indicative of a nonaromatic molecule. The insertion of copper(II) into dibenzoporphyrins(2.1.2.1) induced a change in the macrocyclic cavity shape from rectangular in the case of the free-base precursors to approximately square for the metalated copper derivatives. Solution electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra at 100 K showed hyperfine coupling of the Cu(II) central metal ion and the N nucleus in the highly bent molecular structures. Electrochemical measurements in CH2Cl2 or N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) containing 0.1 M tetrabutylammonium perchlorate (TBAP) were consistent with ring-centered electron transfers and, in the case of reduction, were assigned to electron additions involving two equivalent π centers on the bent nonaromatic molecule.