Publications by authors named "Gavin Tay"

Article Synopsis
  • Photocyclisation reactions provide a useful method for creating complex polycyclic structures, especially in natural product synthesis, with the [4 + 2] reaction being less explored than its [2 + 2] counterpart.
  • This study introduced the rapid assembly of a -type scaffold using an intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction on a dehydrosecodine-type intermediate, achieving up to 77% yield under mild conditions via a micro-flow system.
  • The research highlights the direct UV-LED activation of the DHP moiety, allowing for efficient [4 + 2] and [2 + 2] cyclisations without needing external photocatalysts, thus showcasing a novel approach to exploiting the reactivity of polyuns
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Numerous indole alkaloids such as the iboga- and aspidosperma-type are believed to be biosynthesized via a common hypothetical intermediate, dehydrosecodine. The highly reactive nature of dehydrosecodine-type compounds has hampered their isolation and structural elucidation. In this study, we achieved the first X-ray structural determination of a dehydrosecodine-type compound by integrating synthetic optimization of the reactivity and stabilizing the fragile molecule by encapsulation into a supramolecular host.

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The robust, proteinaceous egg capsules of marine prosobranch gastropods (genus Busycotypus ) exhibit unique biomechanical properties such as high elastic strain recovery and elastic energy dissipation capability. Capsule material possesses long-range extensibility that is fully recoverable and is the result of a secondary structure phase transition from α-helical coiled-coil to extended β-sheet rather than of entropic (rubber) elasticity. We report here the characterization of the precursor proteins that make up this material.

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Efforts to engineer new materials inspired by biological structures are hampered by the lack of genomic data from many model organisms studied in biomimetic research. Here we show that biomimetic engineering can be accelerated by integrating high-throughput RNA-seq with proteomics and advanced materials characterization. This approach can be applied to a broad range of systems, as we illustrate by investigating diverse high-performance biological materials involved in embryo protection, adhesion and predation.

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