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Discovering and engineering herbicide-resistant genes is a crucial challenge in crop breeding. This study focuses on the 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase Inhibitor Sensitive 1-Like (HSL) protein, prevalent in higher plants and exhibiting weak catalytic activity against many ß-triketone herbicides (ß-THs). The crystal structures of maize HSL1A complexed with ß-THs were elucidated, identifying four essential herbicide-binding residues and explaining the weak activity of HSL1A against the herbicides. Utilizing an artificial evolution approach, we developed a series of rice HSL1 mutants targeting the four residues. Then, these mutants were systematically evaluated, identifying the M10 variant as the most effective in modifying ß-THs. The initial active conformation of substrate binding in HSL1 was also revealed from these mutants. Furthermore, overexpression of M10 in rice significantly enhanced resistance to ß-THs, resulting in a notable 32-fold increase in resistance to methyl-benquitrione. In conclusion, the artificially evolved M10 gene shows great potential for the development of herbicide-resistant crops.
Asunto(s)
Resistencia a los Herbicidas , Herbicidas , Oryza , Proteínas de Plantas , Oryza/genética , Oryza/metabolismo , Resistencia a los Herbicidas/genética , Herbicidas/farmacología , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Fitomejoramiento/métodos , Plantas Modificadas Genéticamente/genética , MutaciónRESUMEN
Precise synthesis of polyoxometalates (POMs) is important for the fundamental understanding of the relationship between the structure and function of each building motif. However, it is a great challenge to realize the atomic-level tailoring of specific sites in POMs without altering the major framework. Herein, we report the case of Ce-mediated molecular tailoring on gigantic {Mo132}, which has a closed structural motif involving a never seen {Mo110} decamer. Such capped wheel {Mo132} undergoes a quasi-isomerism with known {Mo132} ball displaying different optical behaviors. Experiencing an 'Inner-On-Outer' binding process with the substituent of {Mo2} reactive sites in {Mo132}, the site-specific Ce ions drive the dissociation of {Mo2*} clipping sites and finally give rise to a predictable half-closed product {Ce11Mo96}. By virtue of the tailor-made open cavity, the {Ce11Mo96} achieves high proton conduction, nearly two orders of magnitude than that of {Mo132}. This work offers a significant step toward the controllable assembly of POM clusters through a Ce-mediated molecular tailoring process for desirable properties.
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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as types of proton conductive materials have attracted much attention. Here, an acylamide-functionalized 3D MOF, [Ni3(TPBTC)2(stp)2(H2O)4]·2DMA·32H2O, has been successfully constructed via combining Ni(NO3)2, TPBTC (TPBTC = benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylic acid tris-pyridin-4-ylamide) and 2-H2stp (2-H2stp = 2-sulfoterephthalic acid monosodium salt) under solvothermal conditions. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction revealed that there are uncoordinated guest DMA molecules in the pores of the compound. On removal of guest DMA molecules, the proton conductivity of the compound increased to 2.25 × 10-3 S cm-1 at 80 °C and 98% RH which is about 110 times that of the original material. It is hoped that this work can provide essential insight for designing and obtaining improved crystalline-state proton conducting materials by considering the influences of guest molecules on proton conduction properties of porous materials.
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Direct conversion of diluted CO2 to value-added chemical stocks and fuels with solar energy is an energy-saving approach to relieve global warming and realize a carbon-neutral cycle. The exploration of catalysts with both efficient CO2 adsorption and reduction ability is significant to achieving this goal. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are emerging in the field of low-concentration CO2 reduction due to their highly tunable structure, high porosity, abundant active sites and excellent CO2 adsorption capacity. This highlight outlines the advantages of MOFs for low-pressure CO2 adsorption and the strategies to improve the photocatalytic performance of MOF materials at low CO2 concentrations, including the functionalization of organic ligands, regulation of metal nodes and preparation of MOF composites or derivatives. This paper aims to provide possible avenues for the rational design and development of catalysts with the ability to reduce low-concentration CO2 efficiently for practical applications.
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Three new cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6])-based metal-organic rotaxane networks (MORNs) (named CUST-711, CUST-712, and CUST-713) functionalized by a sulfonic group (-SO3H) have been designed and synthesized via a hydrothermal method. All three compounds exhibited similar two-dimensional (2D) wave layer structures. Their stability under different temperature and relative humidity conditions has been investigated and all the compounds showed excellent stability. Furthermore, their proton conduction properties were also discussed in detail. Due to different structures and sulfonic group sites, the three compounds exhibited different proton conduction abilities of which CUST-712 exhibited an intrinsic relatively high proton conductivity (1.75 × 10-4 S cm-1 at 85 °C and 97% relative humidity). These results provide ideas for the design and synthesis of functional CB[6]-based metal-organic rotaxane frameworks (MORFs) as proton conducting materials.
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The synthesis of ultra-stable chiral porous organic cages (POCs) and their controllable chiral self-sorting at the molecular and supramolecular level remains challening. Herein, we report the design and synthesis of a serial of axially chiral porous aromatic cages (PAC 1-S and 1-R) with high chemical stability. The theoretical and experimental studies on the chiral self-sorting reveal that the exclusive self-recognition on cage formation is an enthalpy-driven process while the chiral narcissistic and self-sorting on supramolecular assembly of racemic cages can be precisely regulated by π-π and C-H π interactions from different solvents. Regarding the chemical stability, the crystallinity of PAC 1 is maintained in aqueous solvents, such as boiling water, high-concentrated acid and alkali; mixtures of solvents, such as 1 M H2SO4/MeOH/H2O solution, are also tolerated. Investigations on the chiral sensing performance show that PAC 1 enables enantioselective recognition of axially chiral biaryl molecules.
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Fully reduced polyoxometalates are predicted to give rise to a broad and strong absorption spectrum, suitable energy levels, and unparalleled electronic and optical properties. However, they are not available to date. Here, an unprecedented fully reduced polyoxomolybdate cluster, namely Na8[MoV 60O140(OH)28]·19H2O {MoV 60}, was successfully designed and obtained under hydrothermal conditions, which is rare and is the largest fully reduced polyoxometalate reported so far. The MoV 60 molecule describes one Keggin {ε-Mo12} encapsulated in an unprecedented {Mo24} cage, giving rise to a double truncated tetrahedron quasi-nesting architecture, which is further face-capped by another four {Mo6} tripods. Its crystalline stability in air, solvent tolerance, and photosensitivity were all shown. As a cheap and robust molecular light-absorber model possessing wide light absorption, MoV 60 was applied to build a co-sensitized solar cell photoelectronic device along with N719 dyes and the optimal power conversion efficiency was 28% higher than that of single-dye sensitization. These results show that MoV 60 polyoxometalate could serve as an ideal model for the design and synthesis of all-inorganic molecular light-absorbers for other light-driven processes in the future.
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Constructing high-quality white organic light-emitting diodes (WOLEDs) remains a big challenge because of high demands on the electroluminescence (EL) performance including high efficiency, excellent spectral stability, and low roll-off simultaneously. To achieve effective energy transfer and trap-assisted recombination in the emissive layer, herein, four Ir(III) phosphors, namely, mOMe-Ir-PI (1), pOMe-Ir-PI (2), mOMe-Ir-PB (3), and pOMe-Ir-PB (4), were strategically designed via simple regulation of the substituent moiety and π conjugation of the chelated ligands. Their photophysical and EL properties were systematically investigated. When these phosphors are employed as doped emitters, the monochromic green organic light-emitting diodes not only exhibit a superior performance with the characteristics of 50.2 cd A-1, 39.2 lm W-1, and 15.1%, but also maintain a negligible roll-off ratio of 0.2% at 1000 cd m-2, which are better than those of commercial green Ir(ppy)2acac and Ir(ppy)3 in the same device configuration. Inspired by these outstanding performances, we successfully fabricated the warm WOLED utilizing 2 as a green component, affording a peak efficiency of 42.0 cd A-1, 29.3 lm W-1, and 18.6% and retaining at 39.9 cd A-1, 23.7 lm W-1, and 17.4% even at 1000 cd m-2. The results herein demonstrate the superiority of the molecular design and propose a simple method toward the development of promising Ir(III) phosphors for high-efficiency WOLEDs.
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The direct usage of CO2 in the flue gas to produce fuels or chemicals is of great significance from energy-saving and low-cost perspectives, yet it is still underexplored. Herein, we report the photoreduction of CO2 from the simulated industrial exhaust by synergistic catalysis of TEOA and a metal-free composite (COF1-g-C3N4) fabricated via covalently grafting COF1 with g-C3N4. The hydrogen bond interaction between TEOA and hydrazine units on COF1 is detected in diluted CO2, which leads to significantly enhanced light absorption in the whole visible-light region. Also, the photo-induced electrons undergo fast transfer from COF1 to g-C3N4. This kind of dynamic interface with enhanced light absorption and electron transfer effects promotes the photosynthetic yield of syngas to 165.6 µmol·g-1·h-1 with the use of simulated exhaust gas as a raw material directly. The photosynthetic yield of syngas ranks among the highest of known metal-free catalysts in diluted CO2. This work provides a general rule for designing efficient catalysts via a controlled catalytic interface and new insights into the role of TEOA in photochemical CO2 reduction.
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Photocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction (CO2RR) is considered to be a promising sustainable and clean approach to solve environmental issues. Polyoxometalates (POMs), with advantages in fast, reversible, and stepwise multiple-electron transfer without changing their structures, have been promising catalysts in various redox reactions. However, their performance is often restricted by poor thermal or chemical stability. In this work, two transition-metal-modified vanadoborate clusters, [Co(en)2]6[V12B18O54(OH)6]·17H2O (V12B18-Co) and [Ni(en)2]6[V12B18O54(OH)6]·17H2O (V12B18-Ni), are reported for photocatalytic CO2 reduction. V12B18-Co and V12B18-Ni can preserve their structures to 200 and 250 °C, respectively, and remain stable in polar organic solvents and a wide range of pH solutions. Under visible-light irradiation, CO2 can be converted into syngas and HCOO- with V12B18-Co or V12B18-Ni as catalysts. The total amount of gaseous products and liquid products for V12B18-Co is up to 9.5 and 0.168 mmol g-1 h-1. Comparing with V12B18-Co, the yield of CO for V12B18-Ni declines by 1.8-fold, while that of HCOO- increases by 35%. The AQY of V12B18-Co and V12B18-Ni is 1.1% and 0.93%, respectively. These values are higher than most of the reported POM materials under similar conditions. The density functional theory (DFT) calculations illuminate the active site of CO2RR and the reduction mechanism. This work provides new insights into the design of stable, high-performance, and low-cost photocatalysts for CO2 reduction.
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To evaluate the grain size and particle number formed in a non-equilibrium flow mixing state, flow-injection analysis (FIA) was combined with focused beam reflectance measurement (FBRM). The influence of BaCl2, PEG-4000, ethanol, flowrate, temperature and acidity on the dynamic formation of BaSO4 particles was evaluated. Optimization parameters obtained were 5% BaCl2 as the reagent, 2% PEG-4000 + 6% ethanol as the stabilizer and 0.3 mol L-1 HCl as the carrier with 4 ml min-1 flowrate, and the BaSO4 particle size distribution in the system was in the 1-50 µm range. Under optimized conditions, the system was successfully used for the determination of high sulfate concentrations in the wet-process phosphoric acid process in the 3.2-48 g L-1 (Sct = 55c + 208, r = 0.998, n = 3) range for SO42-. The relative standard deviation was less than 1.86% (n = 11), the detection limit was 0.95 g L-1, the sample throughput reached 30 samples per h, recovery data were within the 97-106% range, and the results were consistent with those of gravimetry (RD < 3%). The system avoids the large error caused by high dilution and the slow analysis speed when measuring high sulfate concentrations.
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An unprecedented Mo-organic molecular cage built on interesting {MoVI2O5} secondary building blocks and BTC ligands, which has been successfully synthesized and systematically characterized, presents the first example of an isopolyoxomolybdates(vi)-organic molecular cage. An investigation into the related Cs+-exchange experiment was performed in detail.
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The rational design and construction of multifunctional electrocatalysts with high activity, low cost, and outstanding stability are highly desirable for the development of renewable energy but are still a big challenge. Bimetallic catalysts are a kind of promising candidates, like the hybrids of Co and VN nanoparticles (Co/VN). However, the inevitable aggregation during the preparation and electrochemical process lowers their reactivity and durability. Herein, small Co/VN nanoparticles (4-8 nm) embedded in porous graphitic carbon layers (Co/VN NPs@C) were obtained through the pyrolysis of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). The synergistic effect of in situ generated Co and VN NPs together with fast electron transfer from graphitic carbon layers renders this catalyst to possess excellent trifunctional performance. More attractively, Co/VN NPs@C as both the anode and the cathode shows a low voltage of 1.58 V when the current density is up to 10 mA cm-2, exceeding most electrocatalysts based on non-noble metals. The rechargeable Zn-air batteries constructed by Co/VN NPs@C deliver high round-trip efficiency together with a peak power density of 130 mW cm-2, a specific capacity of 757 mAh g-1, and desirable stability, outperforming the traditional Zn-air batteries based on the Pt/C and RuO2 pair. This work opens a promising avenue toward constructing highly effective multifunctional electrocatalysts by designing small-sized nanoparticles with various active sites derived from MOFs.
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The remarkably reversible thermochromic luminescence behavior and the rare nonlinear optical (NLO) properties of the [Ag55(MoO4)6(C[triple bond, length as m-dash]C t Bu)24(CH3COO)18(CH3COO)]·2H2O ({Ag55Mo6} for short) nanocluster reported were investigated experimentally. The important contributions of Ag+, C[triple bond, length as m-dash]C- ions and MoO4 2- groups to the NLO properties were proved by further density functional theory (DFT) calculations.
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The mercury ions in waste water have threatened public health and environmental protection. In this sense, novel materials with outstanding performances for removal of Hg2+ are imperative. Herein, we demonstrate a thiol-functionalized zirconium metal-organic cage (MOC-(SH)2) with excellent dispersion displays ideal properties for Hg2+ capture. MOC-(SH)2 exhibits the ability of removing Hg2+ in aqueous solutions with a capacity of 335.9 mgHg2+/gMOC-(SH)2, which surpasses that of classical Zr-based metal-organic framework Uio-66-(SH)2 by 1.89 folds. The higher loading capacity of MOC-(SH)2 is probably owing to the excellent dispersion of the discrete cage, which makes the accessibility of binding sites (thiol) easier. Additionally, 99.6% of Hg2+ can be effectively captured by MOC-(SH)2 with the concentration decreased from 5 to 0.02 ppm reaching the permissible limit for Hg2+, outperforming the performance of Uio-66-(SH)2. The excellent absorption property of MOC-(SH)2 is also achieved in terms of superior selectivity under the presence of competitive metal ions. Meanwhile, the regenerated MOC-(SH)2 can be reused without apparent loss of Hg2+ loading capacity. UV-vis absorption spectra, IR spectra and emission spectra further verified the strong chemical affinity between Hg2+ and the thiol of MOC-(SH)2. The study lays the groundwork for using Zr-MOCs in the removal of toxic metal ions and environmental sustainability.
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We prepare a novel COF for CO2 photoreduction with 99.9% CO selectivity in aqueous solution without a cocatalyst. DFT shows that the preferential adsorption of H+ on the COF results in increased CO2 adsorption energy providing an anchoring site of CO2, and with the cooperation of an ethylene group, CO2 reduction is triggered.
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A system containing polyoxometalate ([Co-POM]2-) and [Ru(bpy)3]2+ as constructed for visible-light-induced CO2 conversion to syngas. In diluted CO2, high efficiency of 56.8 mmol g-1 h-1 in syngas production was gained, exceeding that of reported systems with [Ru(bpy)3]2+ participation in similar conditions. Mechanism studies revealed efficient photo-induced charge separation is achieved in the system and CO2 reduction tends to occur on [Ru(bpy)3]2+.
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Halide perovskites have been employed as photocatalysts for CO2 photoreduction due to their excellent optical properties and unique electronic structure. However, their photocatalytic performance is relatively poor. Herein, we demonstrate a new strategy with Mn-doped CsPb(Br/Cl)3 mixed-halide perovskites as catalysts to enhance the efficiency of CO2 photoreduction. By tuning the content of Mn, a series of CsPb(Br/Cl)3:Mn perovskites are obtained and show high efficiency in CO2 conversion to CO and CH4. For the optimum catalyst sample, especially, the yields of CO and CH4 reach 1917 µmol g-1 and 82 µmol g-1 which are 14.2 and 1.4 times higher than those of CsPbBr3. This work provides new insights into improving the reactivity of perovskites in CO2 photoreduction.
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Two new cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6])-based metal-organic rotaxane networks (MORNs) were successfully obtained by tuning the coordination sphere of metal copper clusters. Compounds 1 and 2 exhibited relatively high proton conductivity at 85 °C and 97% relative humidity (RH), providing great promise for fuel cell electrolyte materials.
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The main mechanism of hyaluronidase 1(HYAL-1) in the development of postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) after pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) was unknown. In this study, a comprehensive inventory of pre-, intra-, and postoperative clinical and biological data of two cohorts (62 pancreatic cancer [PCa] and 111 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma [PDAC]) which could induce POPF were retrospectively analyzed. Then, a total of 7644 genes correlated with HYAL-1 was predicted in PDAC tissues and the enriched pathway, kinase targets and biological process of those correlated genes were evaluated. Finally, a mouse pancreatic fistula (PF) model was first built and in vitro studies were performed to investigate the effects of HYAL-1 on PF progression. Our data indicated that preoperative serum HYAL-1 level, pancreatic fibrosis score, and pancreatic duct size were valuable factors for detecting POPF of Grade B and C. The serum HYAL-1 level of 2.07 mg/ml and pancreatic fibrosis score of 2.5 were proposed as the cutoff values for indicating POPF. The bioinformatic analysis and in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that HYAL-1 facilitates pancreatic acinar cell autophagy via the dephosphorylation of adenosine 5'-monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 (STAT3) signaling pathways, which exacerbate pancreatic secretion and inflammation. In summary, the preoperative serum HYAL-1 was a significant predictor for POPF in patients who underwent PD. Tumor-induced HYAL-1 is one of core risk in accelerating PF and then promoting pancreatic secretion and acute inflammation response through the AMPK and STAT3-induced autophagy.