In this article, a chiral plasmonic hydrogen-sensing platform using palladium-based nanohelices is demonstrated. Such 3D chiral nanostructures fabricated by nanoglancing angle deposition exhibit strong circular dichroism both experimentally and theoretically. The chiroptical properties of the palladium nanohelices are altered upon hydrogen uptake and sensitively depend on the hydrogen concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-resolution multicolor printing based on pixelated optical nanostructures is of great importance for promoting advances in color display science. So far, most of the work in this field has been focused on achieving static colors, limiting many potential applications. This inevitably calls for the development of dynamic color displays with advanced and innovative functionalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErgot alkaloids are important as mycotoxins or as drugs. Naturally occurring ergot alkaloids as well as their semisynthetic derivatives have been used as pharmaceuticals in modern medicine for decades. We identified 196 putative ergot alkaloid biosynthetic genes belonging to at least 31 putative gene clusters in 31 fungal species by genome mining of the 360 available genome sequences of ascomycetous fungi with known proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA previous study showed that together with the festuclavine synthase FgaFS, the old yellow enzyme FgaOx3 from Aspergillus fumigatus catalyzed the conversion of chanoclavine-I aldehyde to festuclavine in the biosynthesis of ergot alkaloids. In the absence of FgaFS, a mixture containing two compounds with a ratio of 7:3 was detected in the enzyme assay of FgaOx3. NMR experiments including (DQF)-COSY, HSQC, HMBC and NOESY identified their structures as E/Z isomers of N-methyl-N-[(5R,10R)-10-(2-oxo-propyl)-2,4,5,10-tetrahydrobenzo[cd]indol-5-yl]formamide and proved the migration of the formyl group at C-8 in chanoclavine I-aldehyde to N-6 in the identified products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErgot alkaloids are indole derivatives with diverse structures and biological activities. They are produced by a wide range of fungi with Claviceps purpurea as the most important producer for medical use. Chanoclavine-I aldehyde is proposed as a branch point via festuclavine or pyroclavine to clavine-type alkaloids in Trichocomaceae and via agroclavine to ergoamides and ergopeptines in Clavicipitaceae.
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