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The mechanism of EBV in MS therefore is a pressing question, whose clarification may substantially advance the pathophysiological understanding, rational therapies, and prevention of MS.Introduction On June 2020, the first case of concurrent Covid-19 and Kawasaki disease (KD) was published. After this first description, further works reported new cases of children affected by KD and KD-like syndrome after SARS-CoV-2 infection. The clinical and biochemical features of these patients differed from the historical cohorts of KD, suggesting the possibility of a new multi-systemic inflammatory syndrome. Is still unclear if this new clinical entity, often referred as pediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome (PIMS) or multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), could be considered as part of the KD spectrum or is a new disease with different pathogenic mechanisms and uniquely linked to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Ilginatinib inhibitor The authors searched the available literature in MedLine (via Pubmed) with the terms ('coronaviruses' OR 'coronavirus') AND ('Kawasaki disease') for English studies without any temporal limit. Areas covered This review aims to comprehensively describe multisystem inflammatory syndromes affecting children during Coronaviruses outbreak, and to evaluate the possible pathogenic role of human Coronaviridae in KD and KD-like syndromes. Expert opinion An increased incidence of PIMS-TS, during the Covid-19 pandemic has been reported, suggesting that SARS-CoV-2 may trigger a severe hyper-inflammatory syndrome in childhood. The pathophysiological mechanisms of this disease are still unclear. Based on these findings, SARS-CoV-2 may be considered another trigger in the complex mosaic about the relationship among infectious agents and the occurrence of systemic hyper-inflammation related syndromes.The azo-coupling of 1- and 2-amino-4-nitro-1,2,3-triazole yielded two new energetic compounds whose detonation properties compete with that of HMX. Though the calculated performances are impressive, the regioisomers have differing sensitivities and detonation behavior. One has sensitivities similar to a very sensitive primary explosive, while the other has sensitivities more comparable to a sensitive secondary explosive. This serves as an example of the ability to tailor the sensitivities and end use of energetic compounds via regioisomerization.The study of protein adsorption at the single molecule level has recently revealed that the adsorption is reversible, but with a long-tailed residence time distribution which can be approximated with a sum of exponential functions putatively related to distinct adsorption sites. Here it is proposed that the shape of the residence time distribution results from an adsorption process with sequential and reversible steps that contribute to overall binding strength resembling "zippering". In this model, the survival function of the residence time distribution of single proteins varies from an exponential distribution for a single adsorption step to a power law distribution with exponent -1/2 for a large number of adsorption steps. The adsorption of fluorescently labeled fibrinogen to glass surfaces is experimentally studied with single molecule imaging. The experimental residence time distribution can be readily fit by the proposed model. This demonstrates that the observed long residence times can arise from stepwise adsorption rather than rare but strong binding sites and provides guidance for the control of protein adsorption to biomaterials.Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are a family of anionic carbohydrates that play an essential role in the physiology and pathology of all eukaryotic life forms. Experimental determination of GAG-protein complexes is challenging due to their difficult isolation from biological sources, natural heterogeneity, and conformational flexibility-including possible ring puckering of sulfated iduronic acid from 1C4 to 2SO conformation. To overcome these challenges, we present GlycoTorch Vina (GTV), a molecular docking tool based on the carbohydrate docking program VinaCarb (VC). Our program is unique in that it contains parameters to model 2SO sugars while also supporting glycosidic linkages specific to GAGs. We discuss how crystallographic models of carbohydrates can be biased by the choice of refinement software and structural dictionaries. To overcome these variations, we carefully curated 12 of the best available GAG and GAG-like crystal structures (ranging from tetra- to octasaccharides or longer) obtained from the PDB-REDO server and refined using the same protocol. Both GTV and VC produced pose predictions with a mean root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of 3.1 Å from the native crystal structure-a statistically significant improvement when compared to AutoDock Vina (4.5 Å) and the commercial software Glide (5.9 Å). Examples of how real-space correlation coefficients can be used to better assess the accuracy of docking pose predictions are given. Comparisons between statistical distributions of empirical "salt bridge" interactions, relevant to GAGs, were compared to density functional theory (DFT) studies of model salt bridges, and water-mediated salt bridges; however, there was generally a poor agreement between these data. Water bridges appear to play an important, yet poorly understood, role in the structures of GAG-protein complexes. To aid in the rapid prototyping of future pose scoring functions, we include a module that allows users to include their own torsional and nonbonded parameters.Both methane (CH4) and acetylene (C2H2) are important energy source and raw chemicals in many industrial processes. The development of an energy-efficient and environmentally friendly separation and purification strategy for CH4 and C2H2 is necessary. Ultramicroporous metal-organic framework (MOF) materials have shown great success in the separation and purification of small-molecule gases. Herein, the synergy effect of tritopic polytetrazolate and ditopic terephthalate ligands successfully generates a series of isoreticular ultramicroporous cadmium tetrazolate-carboxylate MOF materials (SNNU-13-16) with excellent CH4 and C2H2 purification performance. Except for the uncoordinated tetrazolate N atoms serving as Lewis base sites, the pore size and pore surface of MOFs are systematically engineered by regulating dicarboxylic acid ligands varying from OH-BDC (SNNU-13) to Br-BDC (SNNU-14) to NH2-BDC (SNNU-15) to 1,4-NDC (SNNU-16). Benefiting from the ultramicroporous character (3.8-5.9 Å), rich Lewis base N sites, and tunable pore environments, all of these ultramicroporous MOFs exhibit a prominent separation capacity for carbon dioxide (CO2) or C2 hydrocarbons from CH4 and C2H2.