Publications by authors named "S Szewczyk"

Article Synopsis
  • The blockage of miRNA biogenesis by proteins like LIN28 can lead to the activation of oncogenic genes, potentially fueling tumor growth and drug resistance.
  • Researchers have created a cell-based assay to find small molecules that boost mature let-7 miRNA levels by inhibiting LIN28B, using a system with a GFP reporter to track this process.
  • Screening around 4000 compounds, they identified several that increase miRNA levels and found that Kenpaullone and BIO effectively suppress MYCN protein in neuroblastoma cells, paving the way for new cancer drug screenings and potential therapeutic targets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study investigates the immobilization of cyanobacterial photosystem I (PSI) from sp. PCC 6803 onto fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) conducting glass plates to create photoelectrodes for biohybrid solar cells. The fabrication of these PSI-FTO photoelectrodes is based on two immobilization processes: rapid electrodeposition driven by an external electric field and slower adsorption during solvent evaporation, both influenced by gravitational sedimentation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introducing degrees of unsaturation into small molecules is a central transformation in organic synthesis. A strategically useful category of this reaction type is the conversion of alkanes into alkenes for substrates with an adjacent electron-withdrawing group. An efficient strategy for this conversion has been deprotonation to form a stabilized organozinc intermediate that can be subjected to α,β-dehydrogenation through palladium or nickel catalysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Molecular glues enable the degradation of previously "undruggable" proteins via the recruitment of cereblon (CRBN) to the target. One major challenge in designing CRBN E3 ligase modulating compounds (CELMoDs) is the selectivity profile toward neosubstrates, proteins recruited by CRBN E3 ligase agents for degradation. Common neosubstrates include Aiolos, Ikaros, GSPT1, CK1α, and SALL4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We applied transient absorption spectroscopy to study the early photodynamics in a system composed of CdTe quantum dots (QDs) and cytochrome c (Cyt c) protein. In the QDs and Cyt c mixtures, about 25 % of the excited QD electrons quickly relax (∼23 ps) to the ground state and roughly 75 % decay on slower time scale - mostly due to quenching by Cyt c. On the basis of the assumed model, we estimated the contribution of electron transfer and other mechanisms to this quenching.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF