Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 1.928
Filtrar
1.
Annu Rev Biochem ; 92: 351-384, 2023 06 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37068769

RESUMO

Thiolases are CoA-dependent enzymes that catalyze the thiolytic cleavage of 3-ketoacyl-CoA, as well as its reverse reaction, which is the thioester-dependent Claisen condensation reaction. Thiolases are dimers or tetramers (dimers of dimers). All thiolases have two reactive cysteines: (a) a nucleophilic cysteine, which forms a covalent intermediate, and (b) an acid/base cysteine. The best characterized thiolase is the Zoogloea ramigera thiolase, which is a bacterial biosynthetic thiolase belonging to the CT-thiolase subfamily. The thiolase active site is also characterized by two oxyanion holes, two active site waters, and four catalytic loops with characteristic amino acid sequence fingerprints. Three thiolase subfamilies can be identified, each characterized by a unique sequence fingerprint for one of their catalytic loops, which causes unique active site properties. Recent insights concerning the thiolase reaction mechanism, as obtained from recent structural studies, as well as from classical and recent enzymological studies, are addressed, and open questions are discussed.


Assuntos
Coenzima A , Cisteína , Coenzima A/química , Coenzima A/metabolismo , Cisteína/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Acetil-CoA C-Acetiltransferase/química , Acetil-CoA C-Acetiltransferase/metabolismo , Domínio Catalítico
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(45): e2311920120, 2023 Nov 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37922324

RESUMO

High salinity has plagued wastewater treatment for a long time by hindering pollutant removal, thereby becoming a global challenge for water pollution control that is difficult to overcome even with massive energy consumption. Herein, we propose a novel process for rapid salinity-mediated water self-purification in a dual-reaction-centers (DRC) system with cation-π structures. In this process, local hydrogen bond networks of H2O molecules can be distorted through the mediation of salinity, thereby opening the channels for the preferential contact of pollutants on the DRC interface. As the result, the elimination rate of pollutants increased approximately 32-fold at high salinity (100 mM) without any external energy consumption. Our findings provide a novel technology for high-efficiency and low-consumption water self-purification, which is of great significance in environmental remediation and even fine chemical industry.

3.
J Biol Chem ; 300(7): 107475, 2024 Jun 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38879008

RESUMO

Photosystem II (PSII) is the water-plastoquinone photo-oxidoreductase central to oxygenic photosynthesis. PSII has been extensively studied for its ability to catalyze light-driven water oxidation at a Mn4CaO5 cluster called the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC). Despite these efforts, the complete reaction mechanism for water oxidation by PSII is still heavily debated. Previous mutagenesis studies have investigated the roles of conserved amino acids, but these studies have lacked a direct structural basis that would allow for a more meaningful interpretation. Here, we report a 2.14-Å resolution cryo-EM structure of a PSII complex containing the substitution Asp170Glu on the D1 subunit. This mutation directly perturbs a bridging carboxylate ligand of the OEC, which alters the spectroscopic properties of the OEC without fully abolishing water oxidation. The structure reveals that the mutation shifts the position of the OEC within the active site without markedly distorting the Mn4CaO5 cluster metal-metal geometry, instead shifting the OEC as a rigid body. This shift disturbs the hydrogen-bonding network of structured waters near the OEC, causing disorder in the conserved water channels. This mutation-induced disorder appears consistent with previous FTIR spectroscopic data. We further show using quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics methods that the mutation-induced structural changes can affect the magnetic properties of the OEC by altering the axes of the Jahn-Teller distortion of the Mn(III) ion coordinated to D1-170. These results offer new perspectives on the conserved water channels, the rigid body property of the OEC, and the role of D1-Asp170 in the enzymatic water oxidation mechanism.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(39): e2211348119, 2022 09 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36122221

RESUMO

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) mimicking the structure of aquaporins support fast water transport, making them strong candidates for building next-generation high-performance membranes for water treatment. The diffusion and transport behavior of water through CNTs or nanoporous graphene can be fundamentally different from those of bulk water through a macroscopic tube. To date, the nanotube-length-dependent physical transport behavior of water is still largely unexplored. Herein, on the basis of molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the flow rate of water through 0.83-nm-diameter (6,6) and 0.96-nm-diameter (7,7) CNTs exhibits anomalous transport behavior, whereby the flow rate increases markedly first and then either slowly decreases or changes slightly as the CNT length l increases. The critical range of l for the flow-rate transition is 0.37 to 0.5 nm. This anomalous water transport behavior is attributed to the l-dependent mechanical stability of the transient hydrogen-bonding chain that connects water molecules inside and outside the CNTs and bypasses the CNT orifice. The results unveil a microscopic mechanism governing water transport through subnanometer tubes, which has important implications for nanofluidic manipulation.


Assuntos
Grafite , Nanotubos de Carbono , Difusão , Hidrogênio , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Nanotubos de Carbono/química
5.
Nano Lett ; 24(12): 3811-3818, 2024 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38470141

RESUMO

Water responsive polymers represent a remarkable group of soft materials, acting as a laboratory for diverse water responsive physical phenomena and cutting-edge biology-electronics interfaces. We report on peculiarly distinctive viscoelastic behaviors of the biobased water responsive polymer cellulose 10-undecenoyl ester, while biobased regenerated cellulose displays stronger hydroplastic behaviors. We discovered a novel hydrous deformation mechanism involving the stretching of hydrogen bonds mediated by hydroxyl groups and water molecules, serving as a crucial factor in accommodating deformations. In parallel, the microstructure of cellulose 10-undecenoyl ester with unique coexisting nanoparticles and a continuous phase of entangled chains is mechanically resilient in the anhydrous state but enhances structural stiffness in the hydrous state. This variation arises from a different hydration level within the hydrous microstructure. Such a fundamental discovery offers valuable insights into the connection between the microscopic physical properties that can be influenced by water and the corresponding viscoelastic responses, extending its applicability to a wide range of hygroscopic materials.

6.
Nano Lett ; 24(17): 5379-5386, 2024 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38649277

RESUMO

Liquid confined in a nanochannel or nanotube has exhibited a superfast transport phenomenon, providing an ideal heat and mass transfer platform to meet the increasingly stringent challenge of thermal management in developing high-power-density nanoelectronics and nanochips. However, understanding the thermal transport of confined liquid is currently lacking and is speculated to be fundamentally different from that of bulk counterparts due to the unprecedented thermodynamics of liquid in nanoconfined environments. Here, we report that the thermal conductivity of water confined in a silica nanotube is nearly 2-fold as that of bulk status. Further molecular dynamics simulations reveal that this unusual enhancement originates from the densification and reorientation of local hydrogen bonds close to the nanotubes. Thermal-confinement scaling law is established and quantitatively supported by comprehensive simulations with remarkable agreement. Our findings lay a theoretical foundation for designing nanofluidics-enabled cooling strategies and devices.

7.
J Biol Chem ; 299(1): 102763, 2023 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36463961

RESUMO

PcyA, a ferredoxin-dependent bilin pigment reductase, catalyzes the site-specific reduction of the two vinyl groups of biliverdin (BV), producing phycocyanobilin. Previous neutron crystallography detected both the neutral BV and its protonated form (BVH+) in the wildtype (WT) PcyA-BV complex, and a nearby catalytic residue Asp105 was found to have two conformations (protonated and deprotonated). Semiempirical calculations have suggested that the protonation states of BV are reflected in the absorption spectrum of the WT PcyA-BV complex. In the previously determined absorption spectra of the PcyA D105N and I86D mutants, complexed with BV, a peak at 730 nm, observed in the WT, disappeared and increased, respectively. Here, we performed neutron crystallography and quantum chemical analysis of the D105N-BV and I86D-BV complexes to determine the protonation states of BV and the surrounding residues and study the correlation between the absorption spectra and protonation states around BV. Neutron structures elucidated that BV in the D105N mutant is in a neutral state, whereas that in the I86D mutant is dominantly in a protonated state. Glu76 and His88 showed different hydrogen bonding with surrounding residues compared with WT PcyA, further explaining why D105N and I86D have much lower activities for phycocyanobilin synthesis than the WT PcyA. Our quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations of the absorption spectra showed that the spectral change in D105N arises from Glu76 deprotonation, consistent with the neutron structure. Collectively, our findings reveal more mechanistic details of bilin pigment biosynthesis.


Assuntos
Pigmentos Biliares , Oxirredutases , Pigmentos Biliares/biossíntese , Pigmentos Biliares/química , Biliverdina/química , Catálise , Cristalografia , Oxirredutases/genética , Oxirredutases/química , Mutação
8.
J Biol Chem ; 299(6): 104762, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37119850

RESUMO

Bifurcating electron transferring flavoproteins (Bf-ETFs) tune chemically identical flavins to two contrasting roles. To understand how, we used hybrid quantum mechanical molecular mechanical calculations to characterize noncovalent interactions applied to each flavin by the protein. Our computations replicated the differences between the reactivities of the flavins: the electron transferring flavin (ETflavin) was calculated to stabilize anionic semiquinone (ASQ) as needed to execute its single-electron transfers, whereas the Bf flavin (Bfflavin) was found to disfavor the ASQ state more than does free flavin and to be less susceptible to reduction. The stability of ETflavin ASQ was attributed in part to H-bond donation to the flavin O2 from a nearby His side chain, via comparison of models employing different tautomers of His. This H-bond between O2 and the ET site was uniquely strong in the ASQ state, whereas reduction of ETflavin to the anionic hydroquinone (AHQ) was associated with side chain reorientation, backbone displacement, and reorganization of its H-bond network including a Tyr from the other domain and subunit of the ETF. The Bf site was less responsive overall, but formation of the Bfflavin AHQ allowed a nearby Arg side chain to adopt an alternative rotamer that can H-bond to the Bfflavin O4. This would stabilize the anionic Bfflavin and rationalize effects of mutation at this position. Thus, our computations provide insights on states and conformations that have not been possible to characterize experimentally, offering explanations for observed residue conservation and raising possibilities that can now be tested.


Assuntos
Flavoproteínas Transferidoras de Elétrons , Flavoproteínas , Flavoproteínas Transferidoras de Elétrons/metabolismo , Flavoproteínas/química , Oxirredução , Flavinas/metabolismo , Transporte de Elétrons , Flavina-Adenina Dinucleotídeo/metabolismo
9.
Proteins ; 92(8): 923-932, 2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38572606

RESUMO

Genetically encoded fluorescent biosensors (GEFBs) proved to be reliable tracers for many metabolites and cellular processes. In the simplest case, a fluorescent protein (FP) is genetically fused to a sensing protein which undergoes a conformational change upon ligand binding. This drives a rearrangement in the chromophore environment and changes the spectral properties of the FP. Structural determinants of successful biosensors are revealed only in hindsight when the crystal structures of both ligand-bound and ligand-free forms are available. This makes the development of new biosensors for desired analytes a long trial-and-error process. In the current study, we conducted µs-long all atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a maltose biosensor in both the apo (dark) and holo (bright) forms. We performed detailed hydrogen bond occupancy analyses to shed light on the mechanism of ligand induced conformational change in the sensor protein and its allosteric effect on the chromophore environment. We find that two strong indicators for distinguishing bright and dark states of biosensors are due to substantial changes in hydrogen bond dynamics in the system and solvent accessibility of the chromophore.


Assuntos
Técnicas Biossensoriais , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Maltose , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Técnicas Biossensoriais/métodos , Maltose/química , Maltose/metabolismo , Regulação Alostérica , Ligantes , Fluorescência , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica
10.
Proteins ; 92(4): 464-473, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37941304

RESUMO

Although S-nitrosylation of cysteines is a common protein posttranslational modification, little is known about its three-dimensional structural features. This paper describes a systematic survey of the data available in the Protein Data Bank. Several interesting observations could be made. (1) As a result of radiation damage, S-nitrosylated cysteines (Snc) are frequently reduced, at least partially. (2) S-nitrosylation may be a protection against irreversible thiol oxidation; because the NO group of Snc is relatively accessible to the solvent, it may act as a cork to protect the sulfur atoms of cysteines from oxidation by molecular oxygen to sulfenic, sulfinic, and sulfonic acid; moreover, Snc are frequently found at the start or end of helices and strands and this might shield secondary structural elements from unfolding.


Assuntos
Cisteína , Proteínas , Proteínas/química , Cisteína/química , Compostos de Sulfidrila/metabolismo , Oxirredução
11.
Mol Genet Genomics ; 299(1): 23, 2024 Mar 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38431687

RESUMO

Nucleotide mutations in human genes have long been a hot subject for study because some of them may lead to severe human diseases. Understanding the general mutational process and evolutionary trend of human genes could help answer such questions as why certain diseases occur and what challenges we face in protecting human health. In this study, we conducted statistics on 89,895 single-nucleotide variations identified in coding regions of 18,339 human genes. The results show that C and G are frequently mutated into T and A in human genes. C/G (C or G)-to-T/A mutations lead to reduction of hydrogen bonds in double-stranded DNA because C-G and T-A base pairs are maintained by three and two hydrogen bonds respectively. C-to-T and G-to-A mutations occur predominantly in human genes because they not only reduce hydrogen bonds but also belong to transition mutation. Reduction of hydrogen bonds could reduce energy consumption not only in separating double strands of mutated DNA for transcription and replication but also in disrupting stem-loop structure of mutated mRNA for translation. It is thus considered that to reduce hydrogen bonds (and thus to reduce energy consumption in gene expression) is one of the driving forces for nucleotide mutation. Moreover, codon mutation is positively correlated to its content, suggesting that most mutations are not targeted on changing any specific codons (amino acids) but are merely for reducing hydrogen bonds. Our study provides an example of utilizing single-nucleotide variation data to infer evolutionary trend of human genes, which can be referenced to conduct similar studies in other organisms.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , DNA , Humanos , Mutação , DNA/genética , Códon , Nucleotídeos/genética
12.
J Comput Chem ; 2024 Jun 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38922952

RESUMO

This study delves into the nature of individual hydrogen bonds and the relationship between metal cations and hydrogen bonding in the Watson-Crick guanine-cytosine (GC) base pair and its alkali and alkaline earth cation-containing complexes (Mn+-GC). The findings reveal how metal cations affect the nature and strength of individual hydrogen bonds. The study employs interacting quantum atoms (IQA) analysis to comprehensively understand three individual hydrogen bonds within the GC base pair and its cationic derivatives. These analyses unveil the nature and strength of hydrogen bonds and serve as a valuable reference for exploring the impact of cations (and other factors) on each hydrogen bond. All the H ⋯ $$ \cdots $$ D interactions (H is hydrogen and D is oxygen or nitrogen) in the GC base pair are primarily electrostatic in nature, with the charge transfer component playing a substantial role. Introducing a metal cation perturbs all H ⋯ $$ \cdots $$ D interatomic interactions in the system, weakening the nearest hydrogen bond to the cation (indicated by a) and reinforcing the other (b and c) interactions. Notably, the interaction a, the strongest H ⋯ $$ \cdots $$ D interaction in the GC base pair, becomes the weakest in the Mn+-GC complexes. A broader perspective on the stability of GC and Mn+-GC complexes is provided through interacting quantum fragments (IQF) analysis. This approach considers all pairwise interactions between fragments and intra-fragment components, offering a complete view of the factors that stabilize and destabilize GC and Mn+-GC complexes. The IQF analysis underscores the importance of electron sharing, with the dominant contribution arising from the inter-fragment exchange-correlation term, in shaping and sustaining GC and Mn+-GC complexes. From this point of view, alkaline and alkaline earth cations have distinct effects, with alkaline cations generally weakening inter-fragment interactions and alkaline earth cations strengthening them. In addition, IQA and IQF calculations demonstrate that the hydration of cations led to small changes in the hydrogen bonding network. Finally, the IQA interatomic energies associated with the hydrogen bonds and also inter-fragment interaction energies provide robust indicators for characterizing hydrogen bonds and complex stability, showing a strong correlation with total interaction energies.

13.
J Comput Chem ; 45(5): 274-283, 2024 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37792345

RESUMO

A procedure, derived from the fragmentation-based molecular tailoring approach (MTA), has been proposed and extensively applied by Deshmukh and Gadre for directly estimating the individual hydrogen bond (HB) energies and cooperativity contributions in molecular clusters. However, the manual fragmentation and high computational cost of correlated quantum chemical methods make the application of this method to large molecular clusters quite formidable. In this article, we report an in-house developed software for automated hydrogen bond energy estimation (H-BEE) in large molecular clusters. This user-friendly software is essentially written in Python and executed on a Linux platform with the Gaussian package at the backend. Two approximations to the MTA-based procedure, viz. the first spherical shell (SS1) and the Fragments-in-Fragments (Frags-in-Frags), enabling cost-effective, automated evaluation of HB energies and cooperativity contributions, are also implemented in this software. The software has been extensively tested on a variety of molecular clusters and is expected to be of immense use, especially in conjunction with correlated methods such as MP2, CCSD(T), and so forth.

14.
Small ; : e2401164, 2024 May 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38700067

RESUMO

Moisture usually deteriorates polymers' mechanical performance owing to its plasticizing effect, causing side effects in their practical load-bearing applications. Herein, a simple binary ionogel consisting of an amphiphilic polymer network and a hydrophobic ionic liquid (IL) is developed with remarkable stiffening effect after moisture absorption, demonstrating a complete contrast to water-induced softening effect of most polymer materials. Such a moisture-induced stiffening behavior is induced by phase separation after hydration of this binary ionogel. Specifically, it is revealed that hydrogen (H)-bonding structures play a dominant role in the humidity-responsive behavior of the ionogel, where water will preferentially interact with polymer chains through H-bonding and break the polymer-IL H-bonds, thus leading to phase separation structures with modulus boosting. This work may provide a facile and effective molecular engineering route to construct mechanically adaptive polymers with water-induced dramatic stiffening for diverse applications.

15.
Small ; 20(2): e2305797, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37658501

RESUMO

Lithium metal is considered as a promising anode material for next generation lithium-based batteries due to its highest specific capacity and lowest reduction potential. However, irreversible lithium stripping/depositing gives rise to severe dendritic growth and countless dead lithium, which lead to rapid electrochemical performance degradation and increased safety hazards, and thus limit its large-scale application. Herein, this work demonstrates a universal hydrogen-bond-induced strategy to in situ form a highly polarized ferroelectric polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) coating on the anode current collector. The localized electric field induced by the polarized ferroelectric PVDF can accelerate the migration of lithium ions and alleviate the shortage of lithium ions and uneven ion/electron distribution and transfer at the anode/electrolyte interface, thus promoting uniform deposition and stripping of Li+ at high-rate situations. As a result, the symmetrical Li || Li batteries with polarized PVDF coating exhibit a long cycling lifespan over 900 h under 2 mA cm-2 with marginal voltage polarization, and an ultra-high-rate performance up to 8.85 mA cm-2 . The full cells using LiFePO4 cathode also display enhanced electrochemical performance. The innovative strategy of ferroelectric polarization sheds light on interface engineering to circumvent Li dendrite growth in lithium metal batteries (LMBs).

16.
Small ; 20(8): e2307354, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37821406

RESUMO

Aqueous all-iron redox flow batteries (RFBs) are promising competitors for next-generation grid-scale energy storage applications. However, the high-performance operation of all-iron RFBs in a wider temperature range is greatly hindered by inferior iron plating/stripping reaction and low solid-liquid transition temperature at Fe anode. Herein, a universal electrolyte additive design strategy for all-iron RFBs is reported, which realizes a highly reversible and dendrite-free Fe anode at low temperatures. Quantum chemistry calculations first screen several organic molecules with oxygen-containing functional groups and identify N,N-Dimethylacetmide (DMAc) as a potential candidate with low cost, high solubility, and strong interactions with Fe2+ and H2 O. Combined experimental characterizations and theoretical calculations subsequently demonstrate that adding DMAc into the FeCl2 solution effectively reshapes the primary solvation shell of Fe2+ via the Fe2+ -O (DMAc) bond and breaks hydrogen-bonding network of water through intensified H-bond interaction between DMAc and H2 O, thereby affording the Fe anode with enhanced Fe/Fe2+ reversibility and lower freezing point. Consequently, the assembled all-iron RFB achieves an excellent combination of high power density (25 mW cm-2 ), long charge-discharge cycling stability (95.59% capacity retention in 103 h), and preeminent battery efficiency at -20 °C (95% coulombic efficiency), which promise a future for wider temperature range operation of all-iron RFBs.

17.
Small ; 20(23): e2310835, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38126931

RESUMO

The layered orthorhombic molybdenum trioxide (α-MoO3) is a promising host material for NH4 + storage. But its electrochemical performances are still unsatisfactory due to the absence of fundamental understanding on the relationship between structure and property. Herein, NH4 + storage properties of α-MoO3 are elaborately studied. Electrochemistry together with ex situ physical characterizations uncover that irreversible H+/NH4 + co-intercalation in the initial cycle confines the electrochemically reactive domain to the near surface of α-MoO3 thus resulting in a low reversible NH4 + storage capacity. This issue can be resolved by decreasing ion diffusion pathway to construct short-range ordered α-MoO3 (SMO), which improves the specific capacity to 185 mAh g-1. SMO suffers from dissolution issue. In view of this the interlayer structure of SMO is reconstructed via hydrogen bond chemistry to reinforce the structural stability and it is discovered that the hydrogen bond network only with moderate intensity endows SMO with both high capacity and ability against dissolution. This work presents a new avenue to improve the NH4 + storage properties of α-MoO3 and highlights the important role of hydrogen bond intensity in optimizing electrochemical properties.

18.
Small ; : e2403842, 2024 Jul 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38966890

RESUMO

Constructing versatile metal nanoclusters (NCs) assemblies through noncovalent weak interactions between inter-ligands is a long-standing challenge in interfacial chemistry, while compelling interfacial hydrogen-bond-driven metal NCs assemblies remain unexplored so far. Here, the study reports an amination-ligand o-phenylenediamine-coordinated copper NCs (CuNCs), demonstrating the impact of interfacial hydrogen-bonds (IHBs) motifs on the luminescent behaviors of metal NCs as the alteration of protic solvent. Experimental results supported by theoretical calculation unveil that the flexibility of interfacial ligand and the distance of cuprophilic CuI···CuI interaction between intra-/inter-NCs can be tailored by manipulating the cooperation between the diverse IHBs motifs reconstruction, therewith the IHBs-modulated fundamental structure-property relationships are established. Importantly, by utilizing the IHBs-mediated optical polychromatism of aminated CuNCs, portable visualization of humidity sensing test-strips with fast response is successfully manufactured. This work not only provides further insights into exploring the interfacial chemistry of NCs based on inter-ligands hydrogen-bond interactions, but also offers a new opportunity to expand the practical application for optical sensing of metal NCs.

19.
Small ; 20(15): e2307373, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38012527

RESUMO

Surface defects in tin-based perovskite films disrupt the periodic arrangement of atoms in crystals, making surface atoms more susceptible to interactions with water and oxygen molecules in the surrounding environment. The diffusion of oxygen ions into the perovskite interior leads to the formation of severe bulk defects, which compromises the performance of tin-based perovskite solar cells (PSCs). As a result, surface defects are recognized as the primary source of degradation and require special attention. In this study, α-Tocopherol (also known as vitamin E) into tin-based perovskite films is introduced. Experimental results show that because of its larger volume, α-Tocopherol does not enter the perovskite lattice. Instead, it forms van der Waals and hydrogen bond interactions with the formamidine ion (FA+) and the [SnI6]4- octahedron at the perovskite terminals. Through α-Tocopherol passivation, both surface and interior oxidation of the perovskite are significantly suppressed as α-Tocopherol firmly embeds itself on the perovskite surface. Density functional theory analysis confirms the inhibition of I─Sn antisite defects (ISn) and Sn interstitial defects (Sni), which possess deep trap states within the bandgap. Ultimately, it is demonstrated that α-Tocopherol enhances the power conversion efficiency (PCE) from 9.19% to 13.14% and prolongs the lifetime of tin-based PSCs to over 50 days.

20.
Small ; : e2401152, 2024 Apr 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38593320

RESUMO

Bacterial infections and inflammation progression yield huge trouble for the management of serious skin wounds and burns. However, some hydrogel dressing exhibit poor wound-healing capabilities. Additionally, little information is given on the molecular theory of hydrogel gelation mechanisms and drug release performance from drug-polymer network in the water environment. Herein, cationic guar gum (CG) is first mixed with dipotassium glycyrrhizinate (DG), and then crosslinked Cu2+ to strengthen the mechanical strength followed by encapsulating mussel adhesive protein (MAP) as composite dressings. Intriguingly, CG-Cu2+ 0.5-DG10 possessed proper rheological properties and mechanical strength predominantly driven by strong CG-H2O-Cu2+ and Cu2+-CG hydrogen bonding interaction. Weak DG-CG hydrogen bonding only controlled DG release in the initial 4 h, while strong hydrogen bonding is the main force regulating the sustained release of Cu2+ within 48 h. The incorporation of MAP further loosened the tight crosslinking of CG-Cu2+ 0.5-DG10. The screened CG-Cu2+ 0.5-DG10/MAP possessed excellent self-healing, injectability, antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, cell proliferation-promotion activities with high biocompatibility. Therefore, CG-Cu2+ 0.5-DG10/MAP hydrogel expedited wound closure on S. aureus-infected full-thickness skin wound model and lowered necrosis progression to the unburned interspaces on a rat burn model. The results highlight the promising translational potential of Cu2+-inspired hydrogels for the management of burns and infected wounds.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA