Search results for "Spectrophotometry"

showing 10 items of 644 documents

Synthesis, Optical Properties, and DNA Interaction of New Diquats Based on Triazolopyridines and Triazoloquinolines

2017

New diquat derivatives based on [1,2,3]triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine and [1,2,3]triazolo[1,5-a]quinoline have been synthesized in excellent yields. To evaluate the effect of the alkyl bridge length, ethane and propane dibromo alkane substrates were used for their synthesis. Theoretical calculations predicted a very small energetic barrier between the two possible enantiomers P (Ra ) and M (Sa ), which makes them very difficult to resolve. Thermal denaturation studies, UV/Visible spectroscopy, and fluorescence titrations with ct-DNA evidenced the intercalation of the quinoline derivatives in DNA.

Models MolecularMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyStatic ElectricityIntercalation (chemistry)Molecular Conformation010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesMedicinal chemistryCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundUltraviolet visible spectroscopyPyridineDiquatAlkylchemistry.chemical_classificationAlkane010405 organic chemistryQuinolinium CompoundsOrganic ChemistryQuinolineStereoisomerismDNAGeneral ChemistryTriazolesFluorescenceIntercalating Agents0104 chemical sciencesPyrimidineschemistrySpectrophotometryThermodynamicsEnantiomerChemistry - A European Journal
researchProduct

Synthesis, characterisation and crystal structures of Schiff bases from the reaction of 4,6-O-ethylidene-β-D-glucopyranosylamine with substituted sal…

2001

Multiple chemical modifications were carried out on D-glucose to result in the corresponding Schiff bases. Such modifications performed on D-glucose not only helped in increasing the solubility of the products in nonaqueous solvents, but also restricted the anomerisation of the saccharide moiety in solution. NMR study of the products revealed the presence of the β-anomeric form of the saccharide moiety in Me2SO solution. All the compounds were characterised by analytical and spectral methods. The literature is devoid of any crystal structures of saccharide–Schiff base combinations of the type reported in this paper. The crystal structures of these molecules exhibited a tridentate, ONO bindi…

Models MolecularMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyStereochemistryNuclear Magnetic ResonanceCyclohexane conformationStereoisomerismCrystal structureCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryHeterocyclic Compounds 2-RingAnalytical ChemistrySpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredCarbohydrate ConformationMoleculeMoietySolubilitySchiff BasesAldehydesGlucosamineChemistryHydrogen bondOrganic CompoundsOrganic ChemistryHydrogen BondingStereoisomerismGeneral MedicineNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyCrystallographyGlucoseSolubilitySpectrophotometryCrystal StructureSolventsIndraStra Global
researchProduct

Binding Properties of HABA-Type Azo Derivatives to Avidin and Avidin-Related Protein 4

2006

Summary The chicken genome encodes several biotin-binding proteins, including avidin and avidin-related protein 4 (AVR4). In addition to D -biotin, avidin binds an azo dye compound, 4-hydroxyazobenzene-2-carboxylic acid (HABA), but the HABA-binding properties of AVR4 are not yet known. Differential scanning calorimetry, UV/visible spectroscopy, and molecular modeling were used to analyze the binding of 15 azo molecules to avidin and AVR4. Significant differences are seen in azo compound preferences for the two proteins, emphasizing the importance of the loop between strands β3 and β4 for azo ligand recognition; information on these loops is provided by the high-resolution (1.5 A) X-ray stru…

Models MolecularMolecular modelOvalbuminProtein ConformationClinical BiochemistryCrystallography X-RayLigandsSensitivity and SpecificityBiochemistryAvian Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundUltraviolet visible spectroscopyBiotinDrug DiscoveryAnimalsMolecular BiologyGlycoproteinschemistry.chemical_classificationPharmacologyAzo compoundBinding SitesbiologyCalorimetry Differential ScanningMolecular StructureStereoisomerismGeneral MedicineLigand (biochemistry)AvidinCombinatorial chemistryCHEMBIOchemistryBiochemistryBiotinylationbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineSpectrophotometry UltravioletGlycoproteinAzo CompoundsChickensAvidinChemistry & Biology
researchProduct

The Role of Adenine Excimers in the Photophysics of Oligonucleotides

2009

Energies and structures of different arrangements of the stacked adenine homodimer have been computed at the ab initio CASPT2 level of theory in isolation and in an aqueous environment. Adenine dimers are shown to form excimer singlet states with different degrees of stacking and interaction. A model for a 2-fold decay dynamics of adenine oligomers can be supported in which, after initial excitation in the middle UV range, unstacked or slightly stacked pairs of nucleobases will relax by an ultrafast internal conversion to the ground state, localizing the excitation in the monomer and through the corresponding conical intersection with the ground state. On the other hand, long-lifetime intra…

Models MolecularPhotochemistryUltraviolet RaysMolecular ConformationOligonucleotidesAb initioPhotochemistryExcimerBiochemistryCatalysisNucleobaseColloid and Surface ChemistryUltrafast laser spectroscopySinglet stateQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesChemistryAdenineDNAGeneral ChemistryConical intersectionInternal conversion (chemistry)Chemical physicsNucleic Acid ConformationSpectrophotometry UltravioletGround stateDimerizationHydrogenJournal of the American Chemical Society
researchProduct

Origins of fluorescence in evolved bacteriophytochromes

2014

Use of fluorescent proteins to study in vivo processes in mammals requires near-infrared (NIR) biomarkers that exploit the ability of light in this range to penetrate tissue. Bacteriophytochromes (BphPs) are photoreceptors that couple absorbance of NIR light to photoisomerization, protein conformational changes, and signal transduction. BphPs have been engineered to form NIR fluorophores, including IFP1.4, Wi-Phy, and the iRFP series, initially by replacement of Asp-207 by His. This position was suggestive because its main chain carbonyl is within hydrogen-bonding distance to pyrrole ring nitrogens of the biliverdin chromophore, thus potentially functioning as a crucial transient proton sin…

Models MolecularPhotoisomerizationNitrogenSurface PropertiesQuantum yieldCrystallography X-RayLigandsProtein EngineeringPhotochemistryBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundparasitic diseasesSide chainAnimalsCloning MolecularneoplasmsMolecular BiologySpectroscopy Near-InfraredBiliverdinBacteriaPhytochromeChemistryBiliverdinetechnology industry and agricultureta1182WaterHydrogen BondingCell BiologyChromophoreequipment and suppliesFluorescenceProtein Structure Tertiarysurgical procedures operativeSpectrometry FluorescenceStructural biologySpectrophotometryProtein Structure and FoldingPhytochromeHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsBiomarkersProtein BindingJournal of Biological Chemistry
researchProduct

Singlet Excited-State Interactions in Naphthalene-Thymine Dyads

2004

Two thymidine-derived nucleosides 1 and 2 were prepared by attaching a chiral naphthalene to the positions 5′ and 3′ of the sugar. The resulting dyads, which contain key substructures present in drugs and nucleic acids, exhibit different spatial arrangements (transoid or cisoid) of the fluorophore relative to the thymine unit. Emission measurements on these compounds in the presence of ROH molecules revealed a remarkable intramolecular fluorescence quenching for dyad 1. The obtained results are consistent with quenching of the singlet excited state of 1 by hydrogen-bond donor solvents. Thus, a physical deactivation process (vibronically induced internal conversion) would be the pathway resp…

Models MolecularPhotolysisQuenching (fluorescence)ChemistryLasersMolecular ConformationNaphthalenesCrystallography X-RayInternal conversion (chemistry)PhotochemistryFluorescenceAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsThyminechemistry.chemical_compoundSpectrometry FluorescenceIntersystem crossingIntramolecular forceExcited stateSpectrophotometry UltravioletSinglet statePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThymineChemPhysChem
researchProduct

A Ser residue influences the structure and stability of a Pro-kinked transmembrane helix dimer

2012

AbstractWhen localized adjacent to a Pro-kink, Thr and Ser residues can form hydrogen bonds between their polar hydroxyl group and a backbone carbonyl oxygen and thereby modulate the actual bending angle of a distorted transmembrane α-helix. We have used the homo-dimeric transmembrane cytochrome b559′ to analyze the potential role of a highly conserved Ser residue for assembly and stabilization of transmembrane proteins. Mutation of the conserved Ser residue to Ala resulted in altered heme binding properties and in increased stability of the holo-protein, most likely by tolerating subtle structural rearrangements upon heme binding. The results suggest a crucial impact of an intrahelical Ser…

Models MolecularProlineHeme bindingStereochemistryDimerMolecular ConformationBiophysicsCofactor bindingHemeBiochemistryProtein Structure Secondarychemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structureProtein stabilitySerineProtein foldingCofactor bindingHydrogen bondCell MembranePhotosystem II Protein ComplexHydrogen BondingCell BiologyCytochrome b GroupTransmembrane proteinProtein Structure TertiaryOxygenTransmembrane domainHelix interactionchemistrySpectrophotometryMembrane proteinMutationTransmembrane helixProtein foldingDimerizationProtein BindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
researchProduct

The hairpin extension controls solvent access to the chromophore binding pocket in a bacterial phytochrome: a UV-vis absorption spectroscopy study.

2021

AbstractSolvent access to the protein interior plays an important role in the function of many proteins. Phytochromes contain a specific structural feature, a hairpin extension that appears to relay structural information from the chromophore to the rest of the protein. The extension interacts with amino acids near the chromophore, and hence shields the chromophore from the surrounding solvent. We envision that the detachment of the extension from the protein surface allows solvent exchange reactions in the vicinity of the chromophore. This can facilitate for example, proton transfer processes between solvent and the protein interior. To test this hypothesis, the kinetics of the protonation…

Models MolecularProtein ConformationProtonation010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencespH jump03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPhytochrome ADeprotonationBacterial ProteinsPhotostationary statePhysical and Theoretical Chemistrychromophore protein systems030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesBiliverdinBinding SitesPhytochromeProtein dynamicsBiliverdineconformational substatesChromophoreHydrogen-Ion Concentrationsolvent gating0104 chemical sciencesKineticschemistryprotein dynamicsSolventsSpectrophotometry UltravioletproteiinitvalokemiaDeinococcusPhytochromeProtonsPhotochemicalphotobiological sciences : Official journal of the European Photochemistry Association and the European Society for Photobiology
researchProduct

Evidence for Water-Tuned Structural Differences in Proteins: An Approach Emphasizing Variations in Local Hydrophilicity

2012

We present experimental evidence for the significant effect that water can have on the functional structure of proteins in solution. Human (HSA) and Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) have an amino acid sequence identity of 75.52% and are chosen as model proteins. We employ EPR-based nanoscale distance measurements using double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy and both albumins loaded with long chain fatty acids (FAs) in solution to globally (yet indirectly) characterize the tertiary protein structures from the bound ligands' points of view. The complete primary structures and crystal structures of HSA and as of recently also BSA are available. We complement the picture as we have re…

Models MolecularProtein StructureMedical PhysicsNon-Clinical MedicineProtein ConformationMaterials ScienceBiophysicsMolecular Conformationlcsh:MedicineElectronsLigandsBiochemistryPhysical ChemistryAnalytical ChemistryMacromolecular Structure AnalysisAnimalsHumanslcsh:ScienceBiologySerum AlbuminQuantum MechanicsPhysicslcsh:RFatty AcidsElectron Spin Resonance SpectroscopyProteinsComputational BiologyWaterSerum Albumin BovineProtein Structure Tertiarybody regionsChemistrySpectrophotometryInterdisciplinary PhysicsMedicinelcsh:QMaterials CharacterizationCattleMedicinal ChemistryHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsResearch ArticleProtein BindingPLoS ONE
researchProduct

A quantum-chemical study of the structure, vibrations and SiH bond properties of disilylamine, NH(SiH3)2.

2002

Quantum-chemical calculations at HF, MP2 and B3LYP levels with 6-31G* and 6-311G** basis sets are reported for disilylamine, NH(SiH3)2. The equilibrium structure is found to vary with both level and basis set, all but one of the structures exhibiting a small lack of planarity of the HNSi2 system. The barrier to inversion, however, is found to be very low, at most 38 cm(-1). Vibration frequencies and intensities are calculated. The frequencies are scaled, where possible, either using updated infrared data or with the aid of factors transferred from N(CH3)(SiH3)2. Unobserved frequencies due to the v(s)NSi2, deltaNSi2 and delta(perpendicular)NH modes are predicted near 610, 210 and 360 cm(-1),…

Models MolecularSiliconSpectrophotometry InfraredChemistrySilicon CompoundsBiophysicsInfrared spectroscopyHydrogen atomHyperconjugationSpectrum Analysis RamanPotential energyAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsBiophysical PhenomenaAnalytical Chemistrysymbols.namesakesymbolsQuantum TheoryAtomic physicsInstrumentationMulliken population analysisSpectroscopyBasis setRaman scatteringNatural bond orbitalSpectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy
researchProduct