Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 45
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(11): e2304009121, 2024 Mar 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38442161

RESUMO

Elastin is an extracellular matrix material found in all vertebrates. Its reversible elasticity, robustness, and low stiffness are essential for the function of arteries, lungs, and skin. It is among the most resilient elastic materials known: During a human lifetime, arterial elastin undergoes in excess of 2 × 109 stretching/contracting cycles without replacement, and slow oxidative hardening has been identified as a limiting factor on human lifespan. For over 50 y, the mechanism of entropic recoil has been controversial. Herein, we report a combined NMR and thermomechanical study that establishes the hydrophobic effect as the primary driver of elastin function. Water ordering at the solvent:protein interface was observed as a function of stretch using double quantum 2H NMR, and the most extensive thermodynamic analysis performed to date was obtained by measuring elastin length and volume as a function of force and temperature in normal water, heavy water and with cosolvents. When stretched, elastin's heat capacity increases, water is ordered proportional to the degree of stretching, the internal energy decreases, and heat is released in excess of the work performed. These properties show that recoil in elastin under physiological conditions is primarily driven by the hydrophobic effect rather than by configurational entropy as is the case for rubber. Consistent with this conclusion are decreases in the thermodynamic signatures when cosolvents that alter the hydrophobic effect are introduced. We propose that hydrophobic effect-driven recoil, as opposed to a configurational entropy mechanism where hardening from crystallization can occur, is the origin of elastin's unusual resilience.


Assuntos
Elastina , Animais , Humanos , Artérias/química , Cristalização , Elastina/química , Termodinâmica , Água
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(31): e2306046120, 2023 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37487099

RESUMO

The electron-conducting circuitry of life represents an as-yet untapped resource of exquisite, nanoscale biomolecular engineering. Here, we report the characterization and structure of a de novo diheme "maquette" protein, 4D2, which we subsequently use to create an expanded, modular platform for heme protein design. A well-folded monoheme variant was created by computational redesign, which was then utilized for the experimental validation of continuum electrostatic redox potential calculations. This demonstrates how fundamental biophysical properties can be predicted and fine-tuned. 4D2 was then extended into a tetraheme helical bundle, representing a 7 nm molecular wire. Despite a molecular weight of only 24 kDa, electron cryomicroscopy illustrated a remarkable level of detail, indicating the positioning of the secondary structure and the heme cofactors. This robust, expressible, highly thermostable and readily designable modular platform presents a valuable resource for redox protein design and the future construction of artificial electron-conducting circuitry.


Assuntos
Hemeproteínas , Biofísica , Microscopia Crioeletrônica , Elétrons , Oxirredução
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(37): e2202240119, 2022 09 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36067308

RESUMO

Liquid-liquid phase separation of tropoelastin has long been considered to be an important early step in the complex process of elastin fiber assembly in the body and has inspired the development of elastin-like peptides with a wide range of industrial and biomedical applications. Despite decades of study, the material state of the condensed liquid phase of elastin and its subsequent maturation remain poorly understood. Here, using a model minielastin that mimics the alternating domain structure of full-length tropoelastin, we examine the elastin liquid phase. We combine differential interference contrast (DIC), fluorescence, and scanning electron microscopy with particle-tracking microrheology to resolve the material transition occurring within elastin liquids over time in the absence of exogenous cross-linking. We find that this transition is accompanied by an intermediate stage marked by the coexistence of insoluble solid and dynamic liquid phases giving rise to significant spatial heterogeneities in material properties. We further demonstrate that varying the length of the terminal hydrophobic domains of minielastins can tune the maturation process. This work not only resolves an important step in the hierarchical assembly process of elastogenesis but further contributes mechanistic insight into the diverse repertoire of protein condensate maturation pathways with emerging importance across biology.


Assuntos
Elastina , Tropoelastina , Elastina/química , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Peptídeos/química , Tropoelastina/metabolismo
4.
Proteins ; 92(1): 52-59, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37596815

RESUMO

The core metabolic reactions of life drive electrons through a class of redox protein enzymes, the oxidoreductases. The energetics of electron flow is determined by the redox potentials of organic and inorganic cofactors as tuned by the protein environment. Understanding how protein structure affects oxidation-reduction energetics is crucial for studying metabolism, creating bioelectronic systems, and tracing the history of biological energy utilization on Earth. We constructed ProtReDox (https://protein-redox-potential.web.app), a manually curated database of experimentally determined redox potentials. With over 500 measurements, we can begin to identify how proteins modulate oxidation-reduction energetics across the tree of life. By mapping redox potentials onto networks of oxidoreductase fold evolution, we can infer the evolution of electron transfer energetics over deep time. ProtReDox is designed to include user-contributed submissions with the intention of making it a valuable resource for researchers in this field.


Assuntos
Oxirredutases , Oxirredutases/química , Oxirredução , Transporte de Elétrons
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(18): 12454-12462, 2024 May 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38687180

RESUMO

Quantum defects in single-walled carbon nanotubes promote exciton localization, which enables potential applications in biodevices and quantum light sources. However, the effects of local electric fields on the emissive energy states of quantum defects and how they can be controlled are unexplored. Here, we investigate quantum defect sensitization by engineering an intrinsically disordered protein to undergo a phase change at a quantum defect site. We designed a supercharged single-chain antibody fragment (scFv) to enable a full ligand-induced folding transition from an intrinsically disordered state to a compact folded state in the presence of a cytokine. The supercharged scFv was conjugated to a quantum defect to induce a substantial local electric change upon ligand binding. Employing the detection of a proinflammatory biomarker, interleukin-6, as a representative model system, supercharged scFv-coupled quantum defects exhibited robust fluorescence wavelength shifts concomitant with the protein folding transition. Quantum chemical simulations suggest that the quantum defects amplify the optical response to the localization of charges produced upon the antigen-induced folding of the proteins, which is difficult to achieve in unmodified nanotubes. These findings portend new approaches to modulate quantum defect emission for biomarker sensing and protein biophysics and to engineer proteins to modulate binding signal transduction.


Assuntos
Teoria Quântica , Anticorpos de Cadeia Única/química , Nanotubos de Carbono/química , Dobramento de Proteína , Interleucina-6 , Humanos , Proteínas Intrinsicamente Desordenadas/química
6.
Biophys J ; 122(22): 4440-4450, 2023 11 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37865818

RESUMO

It has long been known that the alteration of protein side chains that occlude or expose the heme cofactor to water can greatly affect the stability of the oxyferrous heme state. Here, we demonstrate that the rate of dynamically driven water penetration into the core of an artificial oxygen transport protein also correlates with oxyferrous state lifetime by reducing global dynamics, without altering the structure of the active site, via the simple linking of the two monomers in a homodimeric artificial oxygen transport protein using a glycine-rich loop. The tethering of these two helices does not significantly affect the active site structure, pentacoordinate heme-binding affinity, reduction potential, or gaseous ligand affinity. It does, however, significantly reduce the hydration of the protein core, as demonstrated by resonance Raman spectroscopy, backbone amide hydrogen exchange, and pKa shifts in buried histidine side chains. This further destabilizes the charge-buried entatic state and nearly triples the oxyferrous state lifetime. These data are the first direct evidence that dynamically driven water penetration is a rate-limiting step in the oxidation of these complexes. It furthermore demonstrates that structural rigidity that limits water penetration is a critical design feature in metalloenzyme construction and provides an explanation for both the failures and successes of earlier attempts to create oxygen-binding proteins.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte , Oxigênio , Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Oxirredução , Heme/metabolismo , Água/metabolismo
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(10): 5291-5297, 2020 03 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32098845

RESUMO

Heterotropic allosteric activation of protein function, in which binding of one ligand thermodynamically activates the binding of another, different ligand or substrate, is a fundamental control mechanism in metabolism and as such has been a long-aspired capability in protein design. Here we show that greatly increasing the magnitude of a protein's net charge using surface supercharging transforms that protein into an allosteric ligand- and counterion-gated conformational molecular switch. To demonstrate this we first modified the designed helical bundle hemoprotein H4, creating a highly charged protein which both unfolds reversibly at low ionic strength and undergoes the ligand-induced folding transition commonly observed in signal transduction by intrinsically disordered proteins in biology. As a result of the high surface-charge density, ligand binding to this protein is allosterically activated up to 1,300-fold by low concentrations of divalent cations and the polyamine spermine. To extend this process further using a natural protein, we similarly modified Escherichia coli cytochrome b562 and the resulting protein behaves in a like manner. These simple model systems not only establish a set of general engineering principles which can be used to convert natural and designed soluble proteins into allosteric molecular switches useful in biodesign, sensing, and synthetic biology, the behavior we have demonstrated--functional activation of supercharged intrinsically disordered proteins by low concentrations of multivalent ions--may be a control mechanism utilized by Nature which has yet to be appreciated.


Assuntos
Grupo dos Citocromos b/química , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/química , Hemeproteínas/química , Proteínas Intrinsicamente Desordenadas/química , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Regulação Alostérica , Cálcio/química , Cátions Bivalentes/química , Ligantes , Magnésio/química , Conformação Proteica , Dobramento de Proteína , Espermina/química , Termodinâmica
8.
Biochemistry ; 61(17): 1862-1873, 2022 09 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35984481

RESUMO

The NAD+ kinase (NADK) is the only known enzyme capable of phosphorylating NAD(H) to NADP(H) and therefore it plays a crucial role in maintaining NAD(P)(H) homeostasis. All domains of life contain at least one NADK gene, and the commonly investigated isoforms have been measured, or assumed, to be functionally irreversible. In 1977, the kinetics of native pigeon liver NADK were thoroughly investigated, and it was reported to exhibit reversible activity, such that ATP and NAD+ can be formed from ADP and NADP+. We hypothesized that the reverse activity of the pigeon enzyme may enable compensation of the high picolinic acid carboxylase (PC) activity present in pigeon livers, which inhibits NAD+ biosynthesis from dietary tryptophan. Here, we report the characterization of four recombinantly expressed NADKs and explore their reversible activities. Duck and cat livers have higher PC activity than pigeon livers, and the recombinant duck and cat NADKs exhibit high activity in the reverse direction. The human NADK has an affinity for NAD+ that is ∼600 times higher than the pigeon, duck, and cat isoforms, and we conclude that NAD+ serves as a potent product inhibitor for the reverse activity of the human NADK, which accounts for the observed irreversible behavior. These results demonstrate that while all four NADKs are reversible, the reverse activity of the human enzyme alone is impeded via product inhibition. This mechanism─the conversion of a reversible to a unidirectional reaction by product inhibition─may be valuable in future metabolic engineering applications.


Assuntos
NAD , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool) , Humanos , NADP/metabolismo , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/metabolismo
9.
Biophys J ; 120(20): 4623-4634, 2021 10 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34339635

RESUMO

Elastin fibers assemble in the extracellular matrix from the precursor protein tropoelastin and provide the flexibility and spontaneous recoil required for arterial function. Unlike many proteins, a structure-function mechanism for elastin has been elusive. We have performed detailed NMR relaxation studies of the dynamics of the minielastins 24x' and 20x' using solution NMR, and of purified bovine elastin fibers in the presence and absence of mechanical stress using solid state NMR. The low sequence complexity of the minielastins enables us to determine average dynamical timescales and degrees of local ordering in the cross-link and hydrophobic modules separately using NMR relaxation by taking advantage of their residue-specific resolution. We find an extremely high degree of disorder, with order parameters for the entirety of the hydrophobic domains near zero, resembling that of simple chemical polymers and less than the order parameters that have been observed in other intrinsically disordered proteins. We find that average backbone order parameters in natural, purified elastin fibers are comparable to those found in 24x' and 20x' in solution. The difference in dynamics, compared with the minielastins, is that backbone correlation times are significantly slowed in purified elastin. Moreover, when elastin is mechanically stretched, the high chain disorder in purified elastin is retained, showing that any change in local ordering is below that detectable in our experiment. Combined with our previous finding of a 10-fold increase in the ordering of water when fully hydrated elastin fibers are stretched by 50%, these results support the hypothesis that stretch induced solvent ordering, i.e., the hydrophobic effect, is a key player in the elastic recoil of elastin as opposed to configurational entropy loss.


Assuntos
Tecido Elástico , Elastina , Animais , Bovinos , Matriz Extracelular , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Tropoelastina
10.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1857(5): 485-492, 2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26498191

RESUMO

The accumulated results of thirty years of rational and computational de novo protein design have taught us important lessons about the stability, information content, and evolution of natural proteins. First, de novo protein design has complicated the assertion that biological function is equivalent to biological structure - demonstrating the capacity to abstract active sites from natural contexts and paste them into non-native topologies without loss of function. The structure-function relationship has thus been revealed to be either a generality or strictly true only in a local sense. Second, the simplification to "maquette" topologies carried out by rational protein design also has demonstrated that even sophisticated functions such as conformational switching, cooperative ligand binding, and light-activated electron transfer can be achieved with low-information design approaches. This is because for simple topologies the functional footprint in sequence space is enormous and easily exceeds the number of structures which could have possibly existed in the history of life on Earth. Finally, the pervasiveness of extraordinary stability in designed proteins challenges accepted models for the "marginal stability" of natural proteins, suggesting that there must be a selection pressure against highly stable proteins. This can be explained using recent theories which relate non-equilibrium thermodynamics and self-replication. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Biodesign for Bioenergetics--The design and engineering of electronc transfer cofactors, proteins and protein networks, edited by Ronald L. Koder and J.L. Ross Anderson.


Assuntos
Sequência de Aminoácidos/fisiologia , Biologia Computacional , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Termodinâmica , Animais , Biologia Computacional/economia , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Biologia Computacional/normas , Evolução Molecular Direcionada , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Proteica , Engenharia de Proteínas/economia , Engenharia de Proteínas/tendências , Dobramento de Proteína , Proteínas/química
11.
Nature ; 458(7236): 305-9, 2009 Mar 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19295603

RESUMO

The principles of natural protein engineering are obscured by overlapping functions and complexity accumulated through natural selection and evolution. Completely artificial proteins offer a clean slate on which to define and test these protein engineering principles, while recreating and extending natural functions. Here we introduce this method with the design of an oxygen transport protein, akin to human neuroglobin. Beginning with a simple and unnatural helix-forming sequence with just three different amino acids, we assembled a four-helix bundle, positioned histidines to bis-histidine ligate haems, and exploited helical rotation and glutamate burial on haem binding to introduce distal histidine strain and facilitate O(2) binding. For stable oxygen binding without haem oxidation, water is excluded by simple packing of the protein interior and loops that reduce helical-interface mobility. O(2) affinities and exchange timescales match natural globins with distal histidines, with the remarkable exception that O(2) binds tighter than CO.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte/síntese química , Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Engenharia de Proteínas , Transporte Biológico , Monóxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Proteínas de Transporte/química , Desenho de Fármacos , Globinas/química , Ácido Glutâmico/metabolismo , Heme/metabolismo , Histidina/metabolismo , Humanos , Cinética , Ligantes , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/química , Neuroglobina , Oxirredução , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Rotação , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier , Especificidade por Substrato , Água/análise , Água/metabolismo
12.
J Struct Biol ; 185(2): 178-85, 2014 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23827257

RESUMO

Phthalocyanines have long been used as primary donor molecules in synthetic light-powered devices due to their superior properties when compared to natural light activated molecules such as chlorophylls. Their use in biological contexts, however, has been severely restricted due to their high degree of self-association, and its attendant photoquenching, in aqueous environments. To this end we report the rational redesign of a de novo four helix bundle di-heme binding protein into a heme and Zinc(II) phthalocyanine (ZnPc) dyad in which the ZnPc is electronically and photonically isolated. The redesign required transformation of the homodimeric protein into a single chain four helix bundle and the addition of a negatively charge sulfonate ion to the ZnPc macrocycle. To explore the role of topology on ZnPc binding two constructs were made and the resulting differences in affinity can be explained by steric interference of the newly added connecting loop. Singular binding of ZnPc was verified by absorption, fluorescence, and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy. The engineering guidelines determined here, which enable the simple insertion of a monomeric ZnPc binding site into an artificial helical bundle, are a robust starting point for the creation of functional photoactive nanodevices.


Assuntos
Hemeproteínas/química , Indóis/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Substituição de Aminoácidos , Sítios de Ligação , Heme/química , Hemeproteínas/genética , Isoindóis , Modelos Moleculares , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Ligação Proteica , Estabilidade Proteica , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Compostos de Zinco
13.
Biochemistry ; 52(3): 447-55, 2013 Jan 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23249163

RESUMO

We report the functional analysis of an artificial hexacoordinate oxygen transport protein, HP7, which operates via a mechanism similar to that of human neuroglobin and cytoglobin: the destabilization of one of two heme-ligating histidine residues. In the case of HP7, this is the result of the coupling of histidine side chain ligation with the burial of three charged glutamate residues on the same helix. Here we compare gaseous ligand binding, including rates, affinities, and oxyferrous state lifetimes, of both heme binding sites in HP7. We find that despite the identical sequence of helices in both binding sites, there are differences in oxygen affinity and oxyferrous state lifetime that may be the result of differences in the freedom of motion imposed by the candelabra fold on the two sites of the protein. We further examine the effect of mutational removal of the buried glutamates on function. Heme iron in the ferrous state of this mutant is rapidly oxidized when exposed to oxygen. Compared to that of HP7, the distal histidine affinity is increased by a 22-fold decrease in the histidine ligand off rate. Electron paramagnetic resonance comparison of these ferric hemoproteins demonstrates that the mutation increases the level of disorder at the heme binding site. Nuclear magnetic resonance-detected deuterium exchange demonstrates that the mutation greatly increases the degree of penetration of water into the protein core. The inability of the mutant protein to bind oxygen may be due to an increased level of water penetration, the large decrease in binding rate caused by the increase in distal histidine affinity, or a combination of the two factors. Together, these data underline the importance of the control of protein dynamics in the design of functional artificial proteins.


Assuntos
Globinas/química , Globinas/metabolismo , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Monóxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Espectroscopia de Ressonância de Spin Eletrônica , Globinas/genética , Ácido Glutâmico/química , Ácido Glutâmico/metabolismo , Heme/química , Heme/metabolismo , Histidina/química , Histidina/metabolismo , Cinética , Ligantes , Proteínas Mutantes/química , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Oxirredução , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Engenharia de Proteínas , Dobramento de Proteína , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Água/análise
14.
Anal Biochem ; 439(1): 1-3, 2013 Aug 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23583818

RESUMO

We have used three-dimensional (3D) printing technology to create an inexpensive spectroelectrochemical cell insert that fits inside a standard cuvette and can be used with any transmission spectrometer. The cell positions the working, counter, and reference electrodes and has an interior volume of approximately 200 µl while simultaneously providing a full 1-cm path length for spectroscopic measurements. This method reduces the time required to perform a potentiometric titration on a molecule compared with standard chemical titration methods and achieves complete electrolysis of protein samples within minutes. Thus, the device combines the best aspects of thin-layer cells and standard potentiometry.


Assuntos
Células , Eletroquímica/métodos , Impressão/métodos , Análise Espectral/métodos , Eletroquímica/instrumentação , Análise Espectral/instrumentação , Fatores de Tempo
15.
J Phys Chem B ; 127(3): 661-672, 2023 Jan 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36649202

RESUMO

Flavin absorption spectra encode molecular details of the flavin's local environment through coupling of local electric fields with the chromophore's charge redistribution upon optical excitation. Translating experimentally measured field-tuned transition energies to local electric field magnitudes and directions across a wide range of field magnitudes requires that the charge redistribution be independent of the local field. We have measured the charge redistribution upon optical excitation of the derivatized flavin TPARF in the non-hydrogen-bonding, nonpolar solvent toluene, with and without a tridentate hydrogen-bonding ligand, DBAP, using electronic Stark spectroscopy. These measurements were interpreted using TD-DFT finite field and difference density calculations. In comparing our present results to previous Stark spectroscopic analyses of flavin in more polar solvents, we conclude that flavin charge redistribution upon optical excitation is independent of solvent polarity, indicating that dependence of flavin transition energies on local field magnitude is linear with local field magnitude.

16.
Sci Adv ; 9(10): eabq1990, 2023 03 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36897954

RESUMO

Ancestral metabolic processes involve the reversible oxidation of molecular hydrogen by hydrogenase. Extant hydrogenase enzymes are complex, comprising hundreds of amino acids and multiple cofactors. We designed a 13-amino acid nickel-binding peptide capable of robustly producing molecular hydrogen from protons under a wide variety of conditions. The peptide forms a di-nickel cluster structurally analogous to a Ni-Fe cluster in [NiFe] hydrogenase and the Ni-Ni cluster in acetyl-CoA synthase, two ancient, extant proteins central to metabolism. These experimental results demonstrate that modern enzymes, despite their enormous complexity, likely evolved from simple peptide precursors on early Earth.


Assuntos
Hidrogenase , Níquel , Níquel/química , Níquel/metabolismo , Hidrogenase/química , Prótons , Hidrogênio/química , Peptídeos
17.
Tetrahedron Lett ; 53(10): 1201-1203, 2012 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23335821

RESUMO

Safranines hold great promise as artificial flavin-like electron transfer cofactors with tunable properties. We report the design and chemical synthesis of the p-methoxy derivative of safranine O using a new synthetic route based on the Ulmann condensation. Spectroelectrochemical comparison of the purified parent safranine and this derivative demonstrates that the modification increases its two-electron reduction potential by 125 mV, or 5.75 kcal/mol. This modification also causes redshifts in the absorbance and fluorescence spectra of the cofactor, suggesting that it may find future utility in arrayed sensor applications.

18.
PLoS One ; 17(6): e0265105, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35749430

RESUMO

Safranine O is widely used in the bioenergetics community as an indicator dye to determine membrane potentials and as an electron transfer mediator in potentiometric titrations. Here we show that two different commercial preparations of Safranine O contain less than sixty percent by weight of the title compound, with the rest primarily consisting of two closely related safranine isomers. All three major isomer components were isolated using reverse phase HPLC and their structures determined using mass spectrometry and two-dimensional NMR. These Safranines have two-electron midpoint potentials ranging from -272 to -315 mV vs. SHE. We have also investigated the absorption and fluorescence spectra of the compounds and found that they display distinct spectral and photophysical properties. While this mixture may aid in Safranine O's utility as a mediator compound, membrane potential measurements must take this range of dye potentials into account.


Assuntos
Fenazinas , Transporte de Elétrons , Oxirredução , Espectrometria de Fluorescência
19.
Adv Mater ; 34(15): e2109107, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35165941

RESUMO

Fluorescent proteins (FPs) have recently emerged as a serious contender for realizing ultralow threshold room temperature exciton-polariton condensation and lasing. This contribution investigates the thermalization of FP microcavity exciton-polaritons upon optical pumping under ambient conditions. Polariton cooling is realized using a new FP molecule, called mScarlet, coupled strongly to the optical modes in a Fabry-Pérot cavity. Interestingly, at the threshold excitation energy (fluence) of ≈9 nJ per pulse (15.6 mJ cm-2 ), an effective temperature is observed, Teff  ≈ 350 ± 35 K close to the lattice temperature indicative of strongly thermalized exciton-polaritons at equilibrium. This efficient thermalization results from the interplay of radiative pumping facilitated by the energetics of the lower polariton branch and the cavity Q-factor. Direct evidence for dramatic switching from an equilibrium state into a metastable state is observed for the organic cavity polariton device at room temperature via deviation from the Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics at k‖  = 0 above the threshold. Thermalized polariton gases in organic systems at equilibrium hold substantial promise for designing room temperature polaritonic circuits, switches, and lattices for analog simulation.


Assuntos
Temperatura
20.
Sci Adv ; 8(27): eabh3421, 2022 Jul 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35857443

RESUMO

The VX nerve agent is one of the deadliest chemical warfare agents. Specific, sensitive, real-time detection methods for this neurotoxin have not been reported. The creation of proteins that use biological recognition to fulfill these requirements using directed evolution or library screening methods has been hampered because its toxicity makes laboratory experimentation extraordinarily expensive. A pair of VX-binding proteins were designed using a supercharged scaffold that couples a large-scale phase change from unstructured to folded upon ligand binding, enabling fully internal binding sites that present the maximum surface area possible for high affinity and specificity in target recognition. Binding site residues were chosen using a new distributed evolutionary algorithm implementation in protCAD. Both designs detect VX at parts per billion concentrations with high specificity. Computational design of fully buried molecular recognition sites, in combination with supercharged phase-changing chassis proteins, enables the ready development of a new generation of small-molecule biosensors.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA