Publications by authors named "Alfredo Bellisario"

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists have found a new way to see tiny changes in proteins very quickly, which is important for biology and medicine.
  • They used special X-ray lasers that can take pictures millions of times a second without much background noise.
  • This new method helps them study how proteins unfold and change shape, making it useful for understanding many different biological processes.
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X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) can probe chemical and biological reactions as they unfold with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. A principal challenge in this pursuit involves the delivery of samples to the X-ray interaction point in such a way that produces data of the highest possible quality and with maximal efficiency. This is hampered by intrinsic constraints posed by the light source and operation within a beamline environment.

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Free-electron lasers could enable X-ray imaging of single biological macromolecules and the study of protein dynamics, paving the way for a powerful new imaging tool in structural biology, but a low signal-to-noise ratio and missing regions in the detectors, colloquially termed 'masks', affect data collection and hamper real-time evaluation of experimental data. In this article, the challenges posed by noise and masks are tackled by introducing a neural network pipeline that aims to restore diffraction intensities. For training and testing of the model, a data set of diffraction patterns was simulated from 10 900 different proteins with molecular weights within the range of 10-100 kDa and collected at a photon energy of 8 keV.

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The secular debate on the origin of life on our planet represents one of the open challenges for the scientific community. In this endeavour, chemistry has a pivotal role in disclosing novel scenarios that allow us to understand how the formation of simple organic molecules would be possible in the early primitive geological ages of Earth. Amino acids play a crucial role in biological processes.

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The development and investigation of heteroazo switches has flourished in recent years. Because of their specific photophysical and photochemical properties, they find versatile applications from material science to medicine. However, a deep mechanistic understanding is needed to be able to predict the properties of such azoswitches.

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The research on heteroaromatic azoswitches has been blossoming in recent years due to their astonishingly broad range of properties. Minimal chemical modifications can drastically change the demeanor of these switches, regarding photophysical and (photo)chemical properties, promoting them as ideal scaffolds for a vast variety of applications based on bistable light-addressable systems. However, most of the characteristics exhibited by heteroaryl azoswitches were found empirically, and only a few works focus on their rationalization.

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