Urban gardening is becoming increasingly popular. Air pollution, which is a major concern in cities might, however, threaten food safety and thus must be assessed. Health risks arise particularly from toxic persistent organic pollutants such as Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) which are formed by incomplete combustion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal triflates have shown a large variety of possibilities as catalysts in organic reactions. Some selected examples of their catalytic activity, in particular in C-O and C-C bond formation are presented. A better understanding of the mode of interaction between these Lewis acids and organic functional groups as ligands should allow for an easier choice of a tailored metal cation for a given reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The current study presents new insight on the phytochemical content and biological activities of five Prunus domestica L. varieties ('Quetsche blanche de Létricourt', 'Mirabelle de Nancy', 'Perdrigon violet', 'Mirabelle de Provence', 'Reine-claude dorée').
Results: The plum leaves were found to possess promising anti-aging activities by their capacity to inhibit 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH), elastase, hyaluronidase and lipoxygenase.
Owing to the importance of metal triflates in catalysis, the affinity of the cationic center for a selection of organic ligands was explored for In and Zn triflates. The organic Lewis bases include a variety of carbonyls (amides, unsaturated ketones, a lactone) and cyclic 1,2-diols. The relative affinity of the ligands for the cationic center in triflates was quantitatively determined on the basis of relative ion concentrations determined by electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal triflates, often called Lewis superacids, are potent catalysts for organic synthesis. However, the reactivity of a given Lewis superacid toward a given base is difficult to anticipate. A systematic screening of catalysts is often necessary when developing synthetic methodologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
January 2016
Cnidarian-dinoflagellate symbiosis mainly relies on nutrient recycling, thus providing both partners with a competitive advantage in nutrient-poor waters. Essential processes related to lipid metabolism can be influenced by various factors, including hyperthermal stress. This can affect the lipid content and distribution in both partners, while contributing to symbiosis disruption and bleaching.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe red alga Asparagopsis taxiformis (Rhodophyta, Bonnemaisoniaceae) has been shown to produce a large diversity of halogenated volatile organic compounds, with one to four carbons. As the distribution of this alga may expand worldwide, we implemented a research program that aims to understand the functions of its specialized metabolome in marine ecosystems. Phytochemical investigations performed on A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of Cs(+) ligation on the decarboxylation of malonic acids (unsubstituted and methyl-, dimethyl-, ethyl-, and phenyl-substituted) in their carboxylate form was studied in the gas phase using tandem mass spectrometry. The study is based on the comparison of the decarboxylation of the bare monoanion (hydrogen malonates) and of the cesium adduct of the cesium salt (Cs(+) [cesium hydrogen malonates]) under collisional activation. Energy-resolved dissociation curves of the negative and positive ions exhibit major differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between the cesium cation and fulvic or humic acids is supposed to play a role in cesium mobility in the environment, which is of importance in the context of geographical dispersion or concentration of the corresponding radionuclides. Among the singly charged positive clusters generated by electrospray ionization of mixtures of carboxylic acids (AH) and cesium salts (nitrate, iodide, or trifluoroacetate), the cluster [A Cs ]Cs [A' Cs ] was subjected to collision-induced dissociation. The fragmentation into Cs [A Cs ] and Cs [A' Cs ] was treated using the kinetic method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between two Lewis "superacid" catalysts Zn(OTf)(2) and In(OTf)(3) and series of amide and phosphate ligands is quantitatively characterized by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). A specific feature of the ESI-MS spectra of the mixture of metal triflates and Lewis bases is the formation of ionic adducts resulting from the displacement of one triflate anion by two neutral ligands. A ligand competition model is developed, which describes the relative intensities of the ionic adducts as a function of relative ligand concentrations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyphenol compounds were extracted from Myrtus communis L. berries (Myrtaceae) by maceration in 70% ethanol and analysed by HPLC-DAD and electrospray mass spectrometry. The Myrtus berries were collected at maturity from seven localities on the island of Corsica (France) and the sampling was carried out during three years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relative Lewis basicity of a series of phosphoryl compounds toward cations M(n+)(OTf)(n-1) derived from triflate salts, M(OTf)(n), is ranked using electrospray mass spectrometry according to competitive adduct formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrifluoromethylsulfonate (triflate) and bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (triflimide) salts, well-known Lewis acid catalysts, present some difficulty in their characterization. By using nitromethane as the solvent, useful electrospray mass spectra in positive and negative ion mode were obtained for salts of metals in oxidation states +2 and +3. In positive mode, addition of a strong Lewis base (triphenylphosphine oxide, TPPO), capable of displacing a triflate (TfO(-)) or a triflimide (Tf(2)N(-)) anion, is necessary for obtaining useful spectra.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCollision-induced dissociation (CID) of the Cs(+) heterodimer adducts of the nitrate anion (NO(3)(-)) and a variety of substituted benzoates (XBenz(-)) [(XBenz(-))(Cs(+))(NO(3)(-))](-) produces essentially nitrate and benzoate ions. A plot of the natural logarithm of their intensity ratio, ln[I (NO(3)(-))/I(XBenz(-))], versus the calculated cesium cation affinity (DFT B3LYP) of the substituted benzoate ions (equivalent to the enthalpy of heterolytic dissociation of the salt) is reasonably linear. This suggests that the kinetic method can be used as a source of data on the intrinsic interaction between the anionic and the cationic moieties in a salt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHumic substances (HS), including humic and fulvic acids, play a significant role in the fate of metals in soils. The interaction of metal cations with HS occurs predominantly through the ionized (anionic) acidic functions. In the context of the effect of HS on transport of radioactive cesium isotopes in soils, a study of the interaction between the cesium cation and model carboxylic acids was undertaken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel series of fluorinated quaternary bisammonium surfactants has been synthesized in view to optimize their antimicrobial activities against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. As compared with commercial references, most of the new surfactants synthesized exhibit an enhanced activity which is discussed as a function of the nature of the spacer group between the quaternized nitrogen atoms and of the nature of the connector function between the nitrogen atoms and the perfluorinated carbon chains. It appears that the fluorinated "Gemini" surfactants bearing an amide connector can be an interesting alternative to hydrocarbon ammonium salts as preservatives and disinfectants against P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn relation to the interaction between (137)Cs and soil organic matter, electrospray mass spectrometry experiments and density functional theory (DFT) calculations were carried out on the dissociation of positively charged adducts formed by cesium nitrate and cesium organic salts attached to a cesium cation [Cs(CsNO(3))(CsA)](+) (A = benzoate, salicylate, hydrogen phthalate, hydrogen maleate, hydrogen fumarate, hydrogen oxalate, and hydrogen malonate ion). These mixed clusters were generated by electrospray from methanol solutions containing cesium nitrate and an organic acid. Collision-induced dissociation of [Cs(CsNO(3))(CsA)](+) in a quadrupole ion trap gave [Cs(CsNO(3))](+) and [Cs(CsA)](+) as major product ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA concerted theoretical (density-functional theory) and experimental electrospray mass spectrometry study was conducted on the formation of cesium cation adducts with small molecules taken as models of specific interactions sites in humic substances. Electrospray experiments with phenol, benzoic acid, salicylic acid, and phthalic acid, in methanolic solution containing cesium nitrate, were performed using a quadrupole ion trap. The formation of positively charged mixed clusters, [Cs(CsNO3)(n)(CsA1)(m)(Cs2A2)(p)]+ (A1 = benzoate, salicylate, and hydrogenophthalate, A2 = phthalate), was observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe introduction of perfluorinated chains in the molecular structure of quaternary ammonium gemini surfactants have led to particularly active antimicrobial agents evaluated in this work. Connectors and spacers were studied in relation with antimicrobial activity in order to determine which molecular parameters are "critical" for biological activity.
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