Hydrogels of bile acids and their salts are promising materials for drug delivery, cellular immobilization, and other applications. However, these hydrogels are poorly understood at the molecular level, and further study is needed to allow improved materials to be created by design. We have used NMR spectroscopy to probe hydrogels formed from mixtures of formic acid and sodium deoxycholate (NaDC), a common bile acid salt. By assaying the ratio of deoxycholate molecules that are immobilized as part of the fibrillar network of the hydrogels and those that can diffuse, we have found that 65% remain free under typical conditions. The network appears to be composed of both the acid and salt forms of deoxycholate, possibly because a degree of charge inhibits excessive aggregation and precipitation of the fibrils. Spin-spin relaxation times provided a molecular-level estimate of the temperature of gel-sol transition (42 °C), which is virtually the same as the value determined by analyzing macroscopic parameters. Saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR spectroscopy established that formic acid, which is present mainly as formate, is not immobilized as part of the gelating network. In contrast, HDO interacts with the network, which presumably has a surface with exposed hydrophilic groups that form hydrogen bonds with water. Moreover, the STD NMR experiments revealed that the network is a dynamic entity, with molecules of deoxycholate associating and dissociating reversibly. This exchange appears to occur preferentially by contact of the hydrophobic edges or faces of free molecules of deoxycholate with those of molecules immobilized as components of the network. In addition, DOSY experiments revealed that gelation has little effect on the diffusion of free NaDC and HDO.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c02175 | DOI Listing |
Luminescence
February 2025
Department of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Minia University, Minia, Egypt.
Alendronate sodium (ALN) is used to treat osteoporosis in men and women who experienced menopause. A new, sensitive, environmentally friendly, selective, and reasonably priced spectrofluorimetric technique was devised for ALN determination utilizing the reaction of the drug with ninhydrin and phenylacetaldehyde in the presence of Teorell-Stenhagen buffer (pH 7). The interaction yielded a highly luminescent diaryl pyrrolone product with strong emission at 464 nm following excitation at 390 nm.
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February 2025
BioNanocomposite Research Center, Department of Food and Nutrition, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
A novel fluorescence-based sensor has been developed for the sensitive detection of malathion, an organophosphorus pesticide, using sulfur-doped quantum dots (SQDs) embedded within graphitic carbon nitride (g-C₃N₄) nanosheets. The SQDs were synthesized through a hydrothermal method, whereas the g-C₃N₄ nanosheets were produced via an exfoliation process. The resulting SQDs@g-C₃N₄ nanocomposite demonstrated outstanding performance for malathion detection in food samples, exhibiting a wide linear detection range of 10-120 μM and an exceptionally low detection limit of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt am Main, Biochemistry, Chemistry, Pharmacy, GERMANY.
Targeting the RNA genome of SARS-CoV-2 is a viable option for antiviral drug development. We explored three ligand binding sites of the core pseudoknot RNA of the SARS-CoV-2 frameshift element. We iteratively optimized ligands, based on improved affinities, targeting these binding sites and report on structural and dynamic properties of the three identified binding sites.
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January 2025
Department of Inorganic Chemistry, Fritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Berlin 14195, Germany.
Understanding a catalytic reaction requires tools that elucidate the structure of the catalyst surface and subsurface, ideally at atomic resolution and under reaction conditions. Operando electron microscopy meets this requirement in some cases, but fails in others where the required reaction conditions cannot be reached or lead to an unwanted influence of the electron beam on the reactant and catalyst. We introduce ILIAS (identical location imaging and spectroscopy) in combination with a quasi in situ approach to disentangle the effect of heat and gas on the surface of nanoparticles from the effect of the electron beam.
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January 2025
Felix Bloch Institute for Solid State Physics, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is a powerful method to characterize the local framework structure of nanoporous materials during the dihydrogen isotopologue adsorption process. It also allows for exploring the adsorption sites of the dihydrogen isotopes and monitoring their desorption characteristics on the microscopic scale. The paramagnetic spin probes in the form of transition metal ions or organic radicals are required for EPR spectroscopy and are introduced either at the framework lattice position or in the pores of the metal-organic frameworks.
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