Results 211 to 220 of about 15,104 (308)

Hydrogen Migration Enhances Proton‐Coupled Electron Transfer in an S‐Scheme Heterojunction for High‐Efficiency Photocatalysis

open access: yesCarbon Energy, EarlyView.
Precisely directed built‐in electric field in an S‐scheme heterojunction synergizes photogenerated charge separation with interfacial proton migration, thus co‐localizing electrons and protons on the NOH surface and boosting proton‐coupled electron transfer kinetics in the rate‐determining hydrogen release step. ABSTRACT The kinetic bottleneck in solar‐
Qinhao Zhao   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source

Complete genome sequence of the <i>Streptococcus parauberis</i> lytic bacteriophage JYU001. [PDF]

open access: yesMicrobiol Resour Announc
Heo Y-U   +5 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Next Generation Hosts for Protein Recognition, Assembly and More

open access: yesChemistry – A European Journal, EarlyView.
The original design of synthetic receptors for proteins was based on macrocycles with a hydrophobic core and a polar/charged periphery. This design, geared towards protein recognition, facilitates receptor self‐assembly. Macrocycle oligomerization, in turn, contributes to protein assembly as evidenced in many cocrystal structures.
Peter B. Crowley
wiley   +1 more source

Solvent‐Driven Conformational Landscapes of a Tetradentate Schiff Base Ligand and Its Metal Complexes: A Genetic Algorithm–Guided VCD Investigation

open access: yesChemistry – A European Journal, EarlyView.
Solvent effects: vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) revealed pronounced solvent‐induced conformational shifts for a tetradentate salen ligand in CDCl3, a solvent generally considered benign. Contrary to the DFT prediction of a single dominant conformer family, quantum cluster growth together with the genetic algorithm guided VCD analysis uncovered ...
Amanda Nhi Tran   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source

C‐Terminal Nucleobase Modification Amplifies Peptide‐Mediated Liposome Fusion

open access: yesChemistry – A European Journal, EarlyView.
Let's come together right now. Cationic peptides are known to promote aggregation of negatively charged liposomes through electrostatic interaction. The process is reversible: once neutrality is achieved, liposomes disaggregate. Here, we demonstrate that end‐capping peptides with nucleobases turns the process into irreversible fusion.
Laura Morbiato   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

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