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A rhodium-catalyzed C4-selective C-H alkenylation of 3-carboxy-2-pyridones with styrenes has been developed. The carboxylic group at the C3 position works as the traceless directing group, and the corresponding C4-alkenylated 2-pyridones are obtained exclusively with concomitant decarboxylation. Unlike the reported procedures, the exclusive C4 selectivity is uniformly observed even in the presence of potentially more reactive C-H bonds at the C5 and C6 positions. By using this strategy, the multiply substituted 2-pyridone can be prepared via sequential C-H functionalization reactions.Fiber and textile electronics provide a focus for a new generation of wearable electronics due to their unique lightness and flexibility. However, fabricating knittable fibers from conductive materials with high tensile and transparent properties remains a challenge, especially for applicability in harsh environments. Here, we report a simple photopolymerization approach for the rapid preparation of a new type of a transparent conductive polymer fiber, poly(polymerizable deep eutectic solvent (PDES)) fiber, which exhibits excellent stability at high/low temperature, in organic solvents, especially in dry environments, and overcomes the volatility and freezability of traditional gel materials. A poly(PDES) fiber possesses outstanding mechanical and sensing properties, including negligible hysteresis and creep, fast resilience after a long stretch (10 min), and signal stability during high-frequency cyclic stretching (1 Hz, 10 000 cycles). In addition, the poly(PDES) fibers are knitted into a plain-structured sensor on textile with breathability and high tolerance to damage, enabling stable and accurate monitoring of human stretching, bending, and rotation motions. Furthermore, its dry-cleaning resistance guarantees the feasibility of long-term monitoring, with the electrical signal remaining stable after five dry-cleaning cycles. These promising features of poly(PDES) fibers will promote potential applications in the fields of human movement monitoring, intelligent fibers, and soft robotics.The NF-κB family of transcription factors is a key regulator of the immune response in the vertebrates. The family comprises five proteins that function as dimers formed in various combinations among the members, with the RelA-p50 dimer being physiologically the most abundant. While most of the 15 possible dimers are scarcely present in the cell with some remaining experimentally undetected to date, there are specific gene sets that are only activated by certain sparsely populated NF-κB dimers. The mechanism of transcription activation of such specific genes that are activated only by specific NF-κB dimers remains unclear. Here we show that the dimer interfacial residues control the stabilization of the global hydrogen bond network of the NF-κB dimerization domain, which, in turn, controls the thermodynamic stabilization of different NF-κB dimers. The relatively low thermodynamic stability of the RelA-RelA homodimer is critical as it facilitates the formation of the more stable RelA-p50 heterodimer. Through the modulation of the thermodynamic stability of the RelA-RelA homodimer, the kinetics of the RelA-p50 heterodimer formation can be regulated. This phenomenon provides an insight into the mechanism of RelA-RelA specific target gene regulation in physiology.A series of novel humidity-responsive and photosensitive polymer films (PCA-PAA-PEG) are prepared. These films can be patterning cross-linked by the photodimerization of coumarin pendant groups. The humidity-induced deformation can be well controlled by the pattern because of the different modulus and hydrophilicity between cross-linked and un-cross-linked segments. In addition, the pattern can be erased and the deformation direction can be changed programmatically by the de-cross-linking-re-cross-linking approach due to the reversible photodimerization of coumarin groups. The cross-linking degree also affects the humidity responsiveness of the film. The deformation of the gradient patterning cross-linked film can be more accurately controlled. Moreover, the length and width ratio (L/Ws/Wh) of the un-cross-linked segment to the cross-linked segment affects the deformation of the films as well. When L/Ws/Wh is 5/2/1 or 5/3/1, the deformation is controllable, and when L/Ws/Wh is 5/1/1 or 5/4/1, the deformation is random at the initial stage, but the whole film will bend along the short axis in the end.Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) is a clinically used osteoinductive growth factor. With a short half-life and side effects, alternative delivery approaches are needed. This work examines thiolation of BMP-2 for chemical attachment to a poly(ethylene glycol) hydrogel using thiol-norbornene click chemistry. BMP-2 retained bioactivity post-thiolation and was successfully tethered into the hydrogel. PF-573228 To assess tethered BMP-2 on osteogenesis, MC3T3-E1 preosteoblasts were encapsulated in matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-sensitive hydrogels containing RGD and either no BMP-2, soluble BMP-2 (5 nM), or tethered BMP-2 (40-200 nM) and cultured in a chemically defined medium containing dexamethasone for 7 days. The hydrogel culture supported MC3T3-E1 osteogenesis regardless of BMP-2 presentation, but tethered BMP-2 augmented the osteogenic response, leading to significant increases in osteomarkers, Bglap and Ibsp. The ratio, Ibsp-to-Dmp1, highlighted differences in the extent of differentiation, revealing that without BMP-2, MC3T3-E1 cells showed a higher expression of Dmp1 (low ratio), but an equivalent expression with tethered BMP-2 and more abundant bone sialoprotein. In addition, this work identified that dexamethasone contributed to Ibsp expression but not Bglap or Dmp1 and confirmed that tethered BMP-2 induced the BMP canonical signaling pathway. This work presents an effective method for the modification and incorporation of BMP-2 into hydrogels to enhance osteogenesis.This work introduces the procedure of using non-immunoassay distance-based paper analytical devices (dPADs) to accurately measure any traces of the cardiac troponin I (TnI) in whole blood samples without the use of any external blood separation. This enables a rapid clinical diagnosis and the subsequent follow-up in regard to identifying acute myocardial infarction. These dPADs are designed and constructed to accommodate three parts (1) a blood separation zone that is immobilized with a hemostatic agent, this no longer requires a blood separation membrane for the isolation of the plasma from the blood element, (2) a pretreatment zone, and (3) a detection zone coated with thymol blue. The quantitative TnI level in the whole blood was determined by measuring the blue color length found in the detection zone, which is proportional to the concentration, owing to the dry protein binding principle. Correspondingly, a mere single drop of human whole blood performs adequately within our proposed method. This reduces both the size of the collection process and the sample volumes needed in the respective medical fields.

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