Search results for "Surface Chemistry"

showing 10 items of 721 documents

Aqueous two-phase system cold-set gelation using natural and recombinant probiotic lactic acid bacteria as a gelling agent

2016

The present study aimed to entrap probiotic lactic acid bacteria (LAB) in a sodium alginate and sodium caseinate aqueous two-phase gel system. The natural acidifying properties of two therapeutic probiotic LAB were exploited to liberate calcium ions progressively from calcium carbonate (CaCO3), which caused the gelation of the co-existing phases. Bi-biopolymeric matrix gelation of GDL/CaCO3 or LAB/CaCO3 was monitored by dynamic rheological measurements, and the final gels were characterized by frequency dependence measurements and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Weak to strong gels were formed with an elastic modulus G' from 10 to 1.000Pa, respectively. After cold-set gelation of our sy…

Calcium alginate[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionProbiotic lactic acid bacteria01 natural sciencesPhase-separationchemistry.chemical_compoundLactonesColloid and Surface ChemistryGlucuronic AcidDrop sizeNa-caseinateMicroscopy Confocal010304 chemical physicsbiologyHexuronic AcidsTemperatureCaseins04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesSurfaces and InterfacesGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion Concentration040401 food scienceLactic acidLactococcus lactisWhey-proteinBiochemistryLactococcus-lactisEmulsionsRheologySodium alginateBiotechnologyGlucono-delta-lactoneWater emulsionsAlginateschemistry.chemical_elementCalciumGluconatesCalcium CarbonateImmobilization0404 agricultural biotechnology0103 physical sciencesRheological propertiesPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryGlucono delta-lactoneBiopolymeric gelProbioticsLactococcus lactisAqueous two-phase systemWaterGlucuronic acidbiology.organism_classificationKineticschemistryChemical engineeringAqueous two-phase system[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionGelsLactobacillus plantarumLactobacillus plantarum
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Pore Size Analysis of MCM-41 Type Adsorbents by Means of Nitrogen and Argon Adsorption

1998

Methods of nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT), proposed recently for predictions of adsorption equilibrium and calculations of pore size distributions in micro- and mesoporous materials, were tested on reference MCM-41 materials. Five newly synthesized MCM-41 adsorbents with presumably uniform pore channels varying from 32 to 45 Å were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), nitrogen adsorption at 77 K, and argon adsorption at 77 and 87 K. New sets of intermolecular interaction parameters of the NLDFT model for N2 and Ar adsorption on MCM-41 were determined. The parameters were specified to reproduce the bulk liquid-gas equilibrium densities and pressures, liquid-gas interfacial t…

Capillary condensationNanoporousChemistryMineralogyThermodynamicsFlory–Huggins solution theoryMolecular sieveSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsBiomaterialsColloid and Surface ChemistryAdsorptionDesorptionZeoliteMesoporous materialJournal of Colloid and Interface Science
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QM/MM Determination of Kinetic Isotope Effects for COMT-Catalyzed Methyl Transfer Does Not Support Compression Hypothesis

2004

Secondary alpha-D3 kinetic isotope effects calculated by the hybrid AM1/TIP3P/CHARMM method for the reaction of S-adenosylmethionine with catecholate anion in aqueous solution and catalyzed by rat liver catechol O-methyltransferase at 298 K are 0.94 and 0.85, respectively, in good accord with experiment. The large inverse effect for the enzymatic reaction is not due to compression but arises from significant increases in the stretching and bending force constants involving the isotopically substituted atoms of the transferring methyl group as between the reactant complex and the transition structure, larger than for the reaction in water.

Carbon IsotopesCatecholAqueous solutionMolecular StructureStereochemistryGeneral ChemistryCatechol O-MethyltransferaseMethylationBiochemistryCatalysisCatalysisIonEnzyme catalysisQM/MMKineticschemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryModels ChemicalchemistryKinetic isotope effectQuantum TheoryPhysical chemistryComputer SimulationOxidation-ReductionMethyl groupJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Mapping the network of pathways of CO diffusion in myoglobin.

2010

The pathways of diffusion of a CO molecule inside a myoglobin protein and toward the solvent are investigated. Specifically, the three-dimensional potential of mean force (PMF or free energy) of the CO molecule position inside the protein is calculated by using the single-sweep method in concert with fully resolved atomistic simulations in explicit solvent. The results are interpreted under the assumption that the diffusion of the ligand can be modeled as a navigation on the PMF in which the ligand hops between the PMF local minima following the minimum free energy paths (MFEPs) with rates set by the free energy barriers that need to be crossed. Here, all the local minima of the PMF, the MF…

Carbon MonoxideMyoglobinCo diffusionimulationGeneral ChemistryBiochemistryCatalysisMaxima and minimaDiffusionCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryMyoglobinchemistryChemical physicsDocking (molecular)MoleculeThermodynamicsComputer SimulationPotential of mean forceBinding siteMinimum free energyJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Nanoparticle Assembly of Surface-Modified Proteins

2016

Nature's biomaterials such as peptides and proteins represent a valuable source of highly defined macromolecules. Herein we developed a nanoparticle drug delivery system based on the assembly of surface-modified proteins that can be transferred into organic solvents and represent the structural material of the carrier system. The particles are prepared by an oil-in-water nanoemulsion technique without the need of additional denaturation or cross-linking steps for stabilization. We achieve the necessary lipophilic solubility switch of the protein material by high surface PEGylation under conservation of the native three-dimensional protein structure. This study focuses on lysozyme as model e…

Carrier systemCell SurvivalSurface PropertiesNanoparticleNanotechnology02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryCatalysisStructure-Activity RelationshipColloid and Surface ChemistryProtein structureHumansDenaturation (biochemistry)Particle SizeSolubilityDrug CarriersDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryGeneral Chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesDoxorubicinDrug deliveryBiophysicsPEGylationNanoparticlesMuramidase0210 nano-technologyHeLa CellsMacromoleculeJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Electrokinetic Properties which Control the Coagulation of Silicate Cement Suspensions during Early Age Hydration

1998

The coagulation of cement particles during early age hydration has been previously identified as the first step of the setting and hardening of cement pastes. By hydrating Ca3SiO5and a silicate-rich clinker under controlled conditions, a correlation between the coagulation of the suspensions and the electrokinetic properties of particles is established. The zeta potential, and hence the surface charge, of particles in suspension depends on the calcium content of the medium. At low concentrations of Ca2+, the zeta potential of Ca3SiO5particles, calcium silicate hydrate (C–S–H), and clinker is negative (<−30 mV) and the suspensions are well dispersed. A strong coagulation occurs at intermedia…

CementChemistryMineralogySurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundElectrokinetic phenomenaColloid and Surface ChemistryChemical engineeringParticle-size distributionHardening (metallurgy)Zeta potentialSilicate CementSurface chargeCalcium silicate hydrateJournal of Colloid and Interface Science
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Enzymatic effects on reactant and transition states. The case of chalcone isomerase.

2007

Chalcone isomerase catalyzes the transformation of chalcone to naringerin as a part of flavonoid biosynthetic pathways. The global reaction takes place through a conformational change of the substrate followed by chemical reaction, being thus an excellent example to analyze current theories about enzyme catalysis. We here present a detailed theoretical study of the enzymatic action on the conformational pre-equilibria and on the chemical steps for two different substrates of this enzyme. Free-energy profiles are obtained in terms of potentials of mean force using hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics potentials. The role of the enzyme becomes clear when compared to the counterpart eq…

Chalcone isomeraseChalconeStereochemistryProtein ConformationCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryChemical reactionCatalysisEnzyme catalysischemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryChalconeChalconesComputational chemistryTransition state analogIntramolecular LyasesBinding SitesbiologyChemistrySubstrate (chemistry)Active siteStereoisomerismGeneral ChemistryTransition stateKineticsbiology.proteinJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Nanocarriers for antioxidant resveratrol: formulation approach, vesicle self-assembly and stability evaluation.

2013

In this work we studied various nanoformulations of resveratrol in phospholipid vesicles. Conventional phophatidylcholine liposomes were prepared and characterized in parallel with PEVs (Penetration Enhancer-containing Vesicles) obtained by adding one of eight selected amphiphilic penetration enhancers (PEs; 0.2% w/v; HLB range 1-16) to the composition. All vesicles were around 100 nm, negatively charged (∼-30 mV) and able to incorporate resveratrol in good yields (>74%). The structure and the lamellar self-organization of the vesicles were investigated by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Small and Wide Angle X-ray Scattering (SWAXS). These analyses showed that the lamellarity of …

Chemical PhenomenaDPPHChemistry PharmaceuticalResveratrolAntioxidantschemistry.chemical_compoundColloidColloid and Surface ChemistryDrug StabilityMicroscopy Electron TransmissionPicratesX-Ray DiffractionAmphiphileStilbenesPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryUnilamellar LiposomesLiposomeDrug CarriersChromatographyChemistryVesicleBiphenyl CompoundsSurfaces and InterfacesGeneral MedicinePenetration (firestop)ResveratrolNanoparticlesNanocarriersBiotechnologyColloids and surfaces. B, Biointerfaces
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Atomically Precise Alkynyl-Protected Metal Nanoclusters as a Model Catalyst: Observation of Promoting Effect of Surface Ligands on Catalysis by Metal…

2016

Metal nanoclusters whose surface ligands are removable while keeping their metal framework structures intact are an ideal system for investigating the influence of surface ligands on catalysis of metal nanoparticles. We report in this work an intermetallic nanocluster containing 62 metal atoms, Au34Ag28(PhC≡C)34, and its use as a model catalyst to explore the importance of surface ligands in promoting catalysis. As revealed by single-crystal diffraction, the 62 metal atoms in the cluster are arranged as a four-concentric-shell Ag@Au17@Ag27@Au17 structure. All phenylalkynyl (PA) ligands are linearly coordinated to the surface Au atoms with staple "PhC≡C-Au-C≡CPh" motif. Compared with reporte…

Chemical substanceIntermetallic02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistrycatalystsCatalysisCatalysisNanoclustersMetalHydrolysisColloid and Surface ChemistryPolymer chemistryCluster (physics)Organic chemistryta116intermetallic nanoclustersta114ChemistryphenylalkynylGeneral Chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencessurface ligandsvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_medium0210 nano-technologyScience technology and societyJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Insights on the origin of catalysis on glycine N-methyltransferase from computational modeling.

2018

The origin of enzyme catalysis remains a question of debate despite much intense study. We report a QM/MM theoretical study of the SN2 methyl transfer reaction catalyzed by a glycine N-methyltransferase (GNMT) and three mutants to test whether recent experimental observations of rate-constant reductions and variations in inverse secondary α-3H kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) should be attributed to changes in the methyl donor−acceptor distance (DAD): is catalysis due to a compression effect? Semiempirical (AM1) and DFT (M06-2X) methods were used to describe the QM subset of atoms, while OPLS-AA and TIP3P classical force fields were used for the protein and water molecules, respectively. The …

Chemistry(all)Static ElectricityMolecular ConformationGlycine N-Methyltransferase010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesenzyme catalysisQM/MMBiochemistryArticleCatalysisEnzyme catalysisCatalysisColloid and Surface ChemistryComputational chemistryKinetic isotope effectMolecule/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1600/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1303/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1500/1505biology010405 organic chemistryChemistryActive siteGeneral ChemistryGlycine N-methyltransferase0104 chemical sciencesKineticsGNMTBiocatalysisbiology.proteinQuantum TheorySN2 reaction/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1500/1503
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