Publications by authors named "R O Hansson"

Drug targeting is a methodology that helps to overcome the side effects of therapeutic molecules. However, insufficient targeting specificity and the on-target/off-site delivery leave much room for improvement in the targeting endeavors. One approach to enhance the specificity of drug targeting is to engineer artificial receptors with recognition ligands not observed in nature.

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This joint experimental-theoretical spectroscopy study of the fullerene derivative PCBM ([6,6]-phenyl-C-butyric acid methyl ester) aims to improve the understanding of the effect of photooxidation on its electronic structure. We have studied spin-coated thin films of PCBM by X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS), Near-edge X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy, and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR), before and after intentional exposure to simulated sunlight in air for different lengths of time. The π* resonance in the C1s NEXAFS spectrum was found to be a very sensitive probe for the early changes to the fullerene cage, while FTIR spectra, in combination with O1s NEXAFS spectra, enabled the identification of the oxidation products.

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Peptides are prime drug candidates due to their high specificity of action but are disadvantaged by low proteolytic stability. Here, we focus on the development of stabilized analogues of EPI-X4, an endogenous peptide antagonist of CXCR4. We synthesized macromolecular peptide conjugates and performed side-by-side comparison with their albumin-binding counterparts and considered monovalent conjugates, divalent telechelic conjugates, and Y-shaped peptide dimers.

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A high-yielding palladium-catalyzed C-S cross-coupling is presented for utilization in carbohydrate chemistry as a key transformation for attachment of a second chelating sulfur atom that allows the exploitation of a latent-active glycosylation strategy with Cu(OTf) as the promoter. The novel approach employs -Br-benzyl thioglycosides as latent glycosyl donors and -SMe-benzyl thioglycosides as the active counterparts.

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Gaseous fluorescein monoanions are weakly fluorescent; they display a broad fluorescence spectrum and a large Stokes shift. This contrasts with the situation in aqueous solution. One explanation of the intriguing behavior in vacuo is based on internal proton transfer from the pendant carboxyphenyl group to one of the xanthene oxygens in the excited state; another that rotation of the carboxyphenyl group relative to the xanthene leads to a partial charge transfer from one chromophore (xanthene) to the other (carboxyphenyl) when the π orbitals start to overlap.

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