2 resultados para Methylated Carrageenans

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


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Ceramides comprise a class of sphingolipids that exist only in small amounts in cellular membranes, but which have been associated with important roles in cellular signaling processes. The influences that ceramides have on the physical properties of bilayer membranes reach from altered thermodynamical behavior to significant impacts on the molecular order and lateral distribution of membrane lipids. Along with the idea that the membrane physical state could influence the physiological state of a cell, the membrane properties of ceramides have gained increasing interest. Therefore, membrane phenomena related to ceramides have become a subject of intense study both in cellular as well as in artificial membranes. Artificial bilayers, the so called model membranes, are substantially simpler in terms of contents and spatio-temporal variation than actual cellular membranes, and can be used to give detailed information about the properties of individual lipid species in different environments. This thesis focuses on investigating how the different parts of the ceramide molecule, i.e., the N-linked acyl chain, the long-chain sphingoid base and the membrane-water interface region, govern the interactions and lateral distribution of these lipids in bilayer membranes. With the emphasis on ceramide/sphingomyelin(SM)-interactions, the relevance of the size of the SMhead group for the interaction was also studied. Ceramides with methylbranched N-linked acyl chains, varying length sphingoid bases, or methylated 2N (amide-nitrogen) and 3O (C3-hydroxyl) at the interface region, as well as SMs with decreased head group size, were synthesized and their bilayer properties studied by calorimetric and fluorescence spectroscopic techniques. In brief, the results showed that the packing of the ceramide acyl chains was more sensitive to methyl-branching in the mid part than in the distal end of the N-linked chain, and that disrupting the interfacial structure at the amide-nitrogen, as opposed to the C3-hydroxyl, had greater effect on the interlipid interactions of ceramides. Interestingly, it appeared that the bilayer properties of ceramides could be more sensitive to small alterations in the length of the long-chain base than what was previously reported for the N-linked acyl chain. Furthermore, the data indicated that the SM-head group does not strongly influence the interactions between SMs and ceramides. The results in this thesis illustrate the pivotal role of some essential parts of the ceramide molecules in determining their bilayer properties. The thesis provides increased understanding of the molecular aspects of ceramides that possibly affect their functions in biological membranes, and could relate to distinct effects on cell physiology.

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In the last decades, the chemical synthesis of short oligonucleotides has become an important aspect of study due to the discovery of new functions for nucleic acids such as antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs), aptamers, DNAzymes, microRNA (miRNA) and small interfering RNA (siRNA). The applications in modern therapies and fundamental medicine on the treatment of different cancer diseases, viral infections and genetic disorders has established the necessity to develop scalable methods for their cheaper and easier industrial manufacture. While small scale solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis is the method of choice in the field, various challenges still remain associated with the production of short DNA and RNA-oligomers in very large quantities. On the other hand, solution phase synthesis of oligonucleotides offers a more predictable scaling-up of the synthesis and is amenable to standard industrial manufacture techniques. In the present thesis, various protocols for the synthesis of short DNA and RNA oligomers have been studied on a peracetylated and methylated β-cyclodextrin, and also on a pentaerythritol-derived support. On using the peracetylated and methylated β-cyclodextrin soluble supports, the coupling cycle was simplified by replacement of the typical 5′-O-(4,4′-dimethoxytrityl) protecting group with an acid-labile acetal-protected 5′-O-(1-methoxy-1-methylethyl) group, which upon acid-catalyzed methanolysis released easily removable volatile products. For this reason monomeric building blocks 5′-O-(1-methoxy-1-methylethyl) 3′-(2-cyano-ethyl-N,N-diisopropylphosphoramidite) were synthesized. Alternatively, on using the precipitative pentaerythritol support, novel 2´-O-(2-cyanoethyl)-5´-O-(1-methoxy-1-methylethyl) protected phosphoramidite building blocks for RNA synthesis have been prepared and their applicability by the synthesis of a pentamer was demonstrated. Similarly, a method for the preparation of short RNAs from commercially available 5´-O-(4,4´-dimethoxytrityl)-2´-O-(tert-butyldimethyl-silyl)ribonucleoside 3´-(2-cyanoethyl-N,N-diisopropylphosphoramidite) building blocks has been developed