A bifunctional catalyst, Pd nanoparticles (NPs) encapsulated in MIL-101, has been synthesized by capillary impregnation. The as-prepared Pd@MIL-101 was characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, N physisorption, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and high-angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy, indicating that Pd NPs were highly dispersed in the pores of MIL-101 without deposition of the nanoparticles on the external surface or aggregation. The bifunctional catalyst of Pd@MIL-101 exhibited highly catalytic activity for alcohol oxidation and aldimine condensation one-pot reactions, where Pd NPs affords good oxidation activity and MIL-101 offers Lewis acidity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo obtain protective human monoclonal antibody from HIV-1 infected person, we adapted a technology for isolating antigen specific monoclonal antibody from human memory B cells through in vitro B cell activation coupled with RT-PCT and expression cloning. Human B cells were purified by negative sorting from PBMCs of HIV-1 infected individuals and memory B cells were further enriched using anti-CD27 microbeads. Two hundred memory B cells per well were cultured in 96-well round-bottom plates Env-specific antibodies in supernatants were with feeder cells in medium containing EBV and CpG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Asian Nat Prod Res
December 2012
A chemical investigation of the endemic relict shrub Tetraena mongolica led to the isolation of four new triterpenes: 11α,12α:13β,28-diepoxyoleanane-3β-yl trans-caffeate (1), 3β-hydroxy-11α,12α-epoxyoleanane-28-al (2), olean-11-en-28-al-3β-yl trans-caffeate (3), and 28-acetoxy-olean-12-en-3β-yl trans-caffeate (4). Their structures were elucidated by extensive spectroscopic methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe small heat shock protein, alpha-crystallin, plays a key role in maintaining lens transparency by chaperoning structurally compromised proteins. This is of particular importance in the human lens, where proteins are exposed to post-translational modifications over the life-time of an individual. Here, we examine the structural and functional consequences of one particular modification of alphaA-crystallin involving the truncation of 5 C-terminal residues (alphaA(1-168)).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhosphorylation is the most common posttranslational modification of the alpha-crystallins in the human lens. These phosphorylated forms are not only important because of their abundance in aging lenses and the implications for cataract but also because they have been identified in patients with degenerative brain disease. By using mimics corresponding to the reported in vivo phosphorylation sites in the human lens, we have examined the effects of phosphorylation upon the chaperone-like properties and structure of alphaB-crystallin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA family of unusual proteins is deposited in flat, structural platelets in reflective tissues of the squid Euprymna scolopes. These proteins, which we have named reflectins, are encoded by at least six genes in three subfamilies and have no reported homologs outside of squids. Reflectins possess five repeating domains, which are highly conserved among members of the family.
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