Publications by authors named "Thomas Vonderach"

Recently, spICP-MS analyses of microplastics have demonstrated that the detection capabilities of ICP-MS are sufficient to determine the size and composition of such materials. However, solution nebulization or microdroplet generation limits the sizes of droplets, microparticles, or cells that can be efficiently introduced into commonly used horizontal ICP-MS configurations. Therefore, we introduced the development of a downward-pointing ICP coupled to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (ICP-TOFMS), which enables quantitative transport of large microdroplets (diameters up to 90 µm) into the ICP.

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Lanthanides were recently discovered as metals required in the active site of certain methanol dehydrogenases. Since then, the characterization of the lanthanome, that is, proteins involved in sensing, uptake, and utilization of lanthanides, has become an active field of research. Initial exploration of the response to lanthanides in methylotrophs has revealed that the lanthanome is not conserved and that multiple mechanisms for lanthanide utilization must exist.

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Capabilities of the downwardly oriented inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) recently reported (Vonderach 2021) were studied using a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (TOFMS) yielding benefits for the fast detection of short transient signals containing multi-element information. The previously reported sample inlet configuration for the analysis of microdroplets was equipped with two extra gas inlets for the supply of argon and helium, which enabled a more precise optimization of the sample introduction and operating conditions of the plasma. Furthermore, the sample supply system was operated at elevated temperatures to enhance the desolvation of the droplets prior to their introduction into the plasma.

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Mixed-valent metal-halides containing s lone pairs may exhibit intense visible absorption, while zero-dimensional (0D) s-based metal-chlorides are generally colorless but have demonstrated promising optoelectronic properties suitable for thermometry and radiation detection. Here, we report solvothermally synthesized mixed-valent 0D metal-halides RbBi Sb Sb Cl (0 ≤ ≤ 7). RbSb Sb Cl crystallizes in an orthorhombic space group () with a unique, layered 0D structure driven by the arrangement of the 5s lone pairs of the SbCl octahedra.

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Rare-earth elements (REEs) were recently discovered to be biologically significant. The finding was originally made with the methanol dehydrogenase XoxF, which depends on REEs for its activity, and reports of lanthanide-utilizing bacteria have since expanded. Environmental proteomics allows the identification of proteins specifically induced by the presence of lanthanides or can provide insights into the preferred use of lanthanide-dependent and -independent isoenzymes, for example.

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We present a prototype of a vertical-downward configuration of an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICPMS) allowing the sample introduction from the top. With this novel approach to orient the ICP downward, we aim to expand the sample transport capabilities in ICPMS especially for the transport of droplets or particles with a final goal to analyze individual cells. Because of this gravity-assisted sampling approach, the transport of larger sized droplets, that is, droplets that would be difficult to transport into a horizontally oriented ICPMS, becomes possible and, furthermore, becomes independent of the droplets' size or size distribution.

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Cell cycle progression requires the coordination of cell growth, chromosome replication, and division. Consequently, a functional cell cycle must be coupled with metabolism. However, direct measurements of metabolome dynamics remained scarce, in particular in bacteria.

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Platinum is the most widely used and best performing sole element for catalyzing the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in low-temperature fuel cells. Although recyclable, there is a need to reduce the amount used in current fuel cells for their extensive uptake in society. Alloying platinum with rare-earth elements such as yttrium can provide an increase in activity of more than seven times, reducing the amount of platinum and the total amount of catalyst material required for the ORR.

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Until recently, rare-earth elements (REEs) had been thought to be biologically inactive. This view changed with the discovery of the methanol dehydrogenase XoxF that strictly relies on REEs for its activity. Some methylotrophs only contain xoxF, while others, including the model phyllosphere colonizer Methylobacterium extorquens PA1, harbor this gene in addition to mxaFI encoding a Ca -dependent enzyme.

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Peptide-stabilized platinum nanoparticles (PtNPs) were developed that have significantly greater toxicity against hepatic cancer cells (HepG2) than against other cancer cells and non-cancerous liver cells. The peptide H-Lys-Pro-Gly-dLys-NH was identified by a combinatorial screening and further optimized to enable the formation of water-soluble, monodisperse PtNPs with average diameters of 2.5 nm that are stable for years.

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