Publications by authors named "H O Pollak"

Clays are a broad class of ubiquitous layered materials. Their specific chemophysical properties are intimately connected to their molecular structure, featuring repeating patterns broken by substitutions. Molecular dynamics simulations can provide insight into the mechanisms leading to the emergent properties of these layered materials; however, up to now, idealized clay structures have been simulated to make the modeling process tractable.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers studied how photoswitches can control voltage-gated ion channels by binding inside their cavities and reacting to light.
  • Using molecular dynamics simulations, they identified three stable binding sites for two specific photoswitches (azobenzene and p-diaminoazobenzene) on the human Na1.4 channel.
  • The binding is influenced by hydrophobic interactions and electrostatic forces, suggesting that these photoswitches could impact how ions pass through the channel when they bind.
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The operability and substrate scope of a redesigned vinylphenol hydratase as a single biocatalyst or as part of multienzyme cascades using either substituted coumaric acids or phenols as stable, cheap, and readily available substrates are reported.

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The promiscuous regio- and stereoselective hydration of 4-hydroxystyrenes catalyzed by ferulic acid decarboxylase from sp. (FDC_) depends on bicarbonate bound in the active site, which serves as a proton relay activating a water molecule for nucleophilic attack on a quinone methide electrophile. This "cofactor" is crucial for achieving improved conversions and high stereoselectivities for ()-configured benzylic alcohol products.

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The catalytic promiscuity of a ferulic acid decarboxylase from sp. (FDC_s) and phenolic acid decarboxylases (PADs) for the asymmetric conjugate addition of water across the C=C bond of hydroxystyrenes was extended to the N-, C- and S-nucleophiles methoxyamine, cyanide and propanethiol to furnish the corresponding addition products in up to 91% . The products obtained from the biotransformation employing the most suitable enzyme/nucleophile pairs were isolated and characterized after optimizing the reaction conditions.

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