3 resultados para Absolute Fluorescent

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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I cicli di Hodge assoluti sono stati utilizzati da Deligne per dividere la congettura di Hodge in due sotto-congetture. La prima dice che tutte le classi di Hodge su una varietà complessa proiettiva liscia sono assolute, la seconda che le classi assolute sono algebriche. Deligne ha dato risposta affermativa alla prima sottocongettura nel caso delle varietà abeliane. La dimostrazione si basa su due teoremi, conosciuti rispettivamente come Principio A e Principio B. In questo lavoro vengono presentate la teoria delle classi di Hodge assolute e la dimostrazione del Principio B.

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During the thesis period a new class of atropisomeric xanthine derivatives has been studied. We decided to focus our attention on these purine bases because of their various biological activities, that could play an important role in the discovery of new bioactive atropisomers. The synthesized compounds bear an Aryl-N chiral axis in position 1 of the xanthine scaffold, around which the rotation is prevented by the presence of bulky ortho substituents. Through a retro synthetic analysis we synthesized three atropisomeric structures bearing in position 1 of the purine scaffold respectively an o-tolyl, o-nitrophenyl and a 1-naphthyl group. The conformational studies by DFT simulations showed that the interconversion energy barrier between the two available skewed conformations is higher enough to obtain thermally stable atropisomers. After the separation of the atropisomers, the experimental energy of interconversion was investigated by means of kinetic studies following the thermal racemization process using an enantioselective HPLC column. The absolute configuration of each atropisomer was assigned by experimental ECD analysis and TD-DFT simulations of the ECD spectra.

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The morphological and functional unit of all the living organisms is the cell. The transmembrane proteins, localized in the plasma membrane of cells, play a key role in the survival of the cells themselves. These proteins perform a variety of different tasks, for example the control of the homeostasis. In order to control the homeostasis, these proteins have to regulate the concentration of chemical elements, like ions, inside and outside the cell. These regulations are fundamental for the survival of the cell and to understand them we need to understand how transmembrane proteins work. Two of the most important categories of transmembrane proteins are ion channels and transporter proteins. The ion channels have been depth studied at the single molecule level since late 1970s with the development of patch-clamp technique. It is not possible to apply this technique to study the transporter proteins so a new technique is under development in order to investigate the behavior of transporter proteins at the single molecule level. This thesis describes the development of a nanoscale single liposome assay for functional studies of transporter proteins based on quantitative fluorescence microscopy in a highly-parallel manner and in real time. The transporter of interest is the prokaryotic transporter Listeria Monocytogenes Ca2+-ATPase1 (LMCA1), a structural analogue of the eukaryotic calcium pumps SERCA and PMCA. This technique will allow the characterization of LMCA1 functionality at the single molecule level. Three systematically characterized fluorescent sensors were tested at the single liposome scale in order to investigate if their properties are suitable to study the function of the transporter of interest. Further studies will be needed in order to characterize the selected calcium sensor and pH sensor both implemented together in single liposomes and in presence of the reconstituted protein LMCA1.