5 resultados para dissociation constant

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Recently, the surface plasmon field-enhanced fluorescence spectroscopy (SPFS) was developed as a kinetic analysis and a detection method with dual- monitoring of the change of reflectivity and fluorescence signal for the interfacial phenomenon. A fundamental study of PNA and DNA interaction at the surface using surface plasmon fluorescence spectroscopy (SPFS) will be investigated in studies. Furthermore, several specific conditions to influence on PNA/DNA hybridization and affinity efficiency by monitoring reflective index changes and fluorescence variation at the same time will be considered. In order to identify the affinity degree of PNA/DNA hybridizaiton at the surface, the association constant (kon) and the dissociation constant (koff) will be obtained by titration experiment of various concentration of target DNA and kinetic investigation. In addition, for more enhancing the hybridization efficiency of PNA/DNA, a study of polarized electric field enhancement system will be introduced and performed in detail. DNA is well-known polyelectrolytes with naturally negative charged molecules in its structure. With polarized electrical treatment, applying DC field to the metal surface, which PNA probe would be immobilized at, negatively charged DNA molecules can be attracted by electromagnetic attraction force and manipulated to the close the surface area, and have more possibility to hybridize with probe PNA molecules by hydrogen bonding each corresponding base sequence. There are several major factors can be influenced on the hybridization efficiency.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Rupture forces of ligand-receptor interactions, such as proteins-proteins, proteins-cells, and cells-tissues, have been successfully measured by atomic force spectroscopy (AFS). For these measurements, the ligands and receptors were chemically modified so that they can be immobilized on the tip and on a substrate, respectively. The ligand interact the receptor when the tip approaches the substrate. This interaction can be studied by measuring rupture force upon retraction. However, this technique is not feasible for measurements involving small molecules, since they form only few H-bonds with their corresponding receptors. Modifying small molecules for immobilization on surfaces may block or change binding sites. Thus, recorded rupture forces might not reflect the full scope of the involved small ligand-receptor interactions.rnIn my thesis, a novel concept that allows measuring the rupture force of small involved ligand-receptor interactions and does not require molecular modification for immobilization was introduced. The rupture force of small ligand-receptor interaction is not directly measured but it can be determined from measurements in the presence and in the absence of the ligand. As a model system, the adenosine mono phosphate (AMP) and the aptamer that binds AMP were selected. The aptamer (receptor) is a single stranded DNA that can partially self-hybridize and form binding pockets for AMP molecules (ligands). The bonds between AMP and aptamer are provided by several H-bonds and pair stacking.rnIn the novel concept, the aptamer was split into two parts (oligo a and oligo b). One part was immobilized on the tip and the other one on the substrate. Approaching the tip to the substrate, oligo a and oligo b partially hybridized and the binding pockets were formed. After adding AMP into the buffer solution, the AMP bound in the pockets and additional H-bonds were formed. Upon retraction of the tip, the rupture force of the AMP-split aptamer complex was measured. In the presence of excess AMP, the rupture force increased by about 10 pN. rnThe dissociation constant of the AMP-split aptamer complex was measured on a single molecular level (~ 4 µM) by varying the AMP concentrations and measuring the rupture force at each concentration. Furthermore, the rupture force was amplified when more pockets were added to the split aptamer. rnIn the absence of AMP, the thermal off-rate was slightly reduced compared to that in the presence of AMP, indicating that the AMP stabilized the aptamer. The rupture forces at different loading rates did not follow the logarithmic fit which was usually used to describe the dependence of rupture forces at different loading rates of oligonucleotides. Two distinguished regimes at low and high loading rates were obtained. The two regimes were explained by a model in which the oligos located at the pockets were stretched at high loading rates. rnThe contribution of a single H-bond formed between the AMP molecule and the split aptamer was measured by reducing the binding groups of the AMP. The rupture forces reduce corresponding to the reduction of the binding groups. The phosphate group played the most important role in the formation of H-bond network between the AMP molecule and the split aptamer. rn

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Der erste Teil dieser Arbeit befasst sich mit der Kinetik der Reaktion des OH-Radikals mit Glykolaldehyd (HOCH2CHO). Die Geschwindigkeitskonstante k1 wurde für diese Reaktion temperaturabhängig bestimmt. Durch gepulste Photolyse wurden OH-Radikale erzeugt. Anschließend wurde die laserinduzierte Fluoreszenz der OH-Radikale bei 309 nm detektiert. Die ermittelte Geschwindigkeitskonstante k1 für die Reaktion von OH mit HOCH2CHO von (8,0 ± 0,8) x 10-12 cm3 Teilchen-1 s-1 erweist sich für den Temperaturbereich von 240 K < T < 362 K als temperaturunabhängig. Zwischen 60 und 250 Torr kann zudem keine Druckabhängigkeit für k1 beobachtet werden. Die unerwartet niedrigere Geschwindigkeitskonstante für die betrachtete Reaktion im Vergleich zur Reaktion von OH mit CH3CHO konnte anhand von Überlegungen zur Korrelation zwischen der C-H-Bindungsstärke und dem H-Abstraktionskanal erklärt werden. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde die Photochemie von Aceton (CH3C(O)CH3), Methylethylketon (C2H5C(O)CH3, MEK) und Acetylbromid (CH3C(O)Br) betrachtet. Für die Photolyse von Aceton (bei 248 nm und 266 nm), MEK (bei 248 nm) und Acetylbromid (bei 248 nm) wurden bei 298 ± 3 K druckabhängig zwischen 5 und 1600 Torr N2 Quantenausbeuten für die Methylbildung (Phi(CH3)) bestimmt. Nach gepulster Photolyse der betrachteten Moleküle wurden die transienten Absorptionssignale der Methylradikale bei 216,4 nm verfolgt. Die Quantenausbeuten wurden relativ zur Photolyse von Methyliodid (CH3I) unter gleichen Reaktionsbedingungen ermittelt. Die erhaltenen Quantenausbeuten für CH3-Radikale nehmen für die beiden Systeme Aceton / 248 nm (Phi(CH3, Aceton) = 1,42 – 0,99) und MEK / 248 nm (Phi(CH3, MEK) = 0,45 – 0,19) druckabhängig zu hohen Drücken ab. Die Druckabhängigkeit von Phi(CH3) wird auf die Konkurrenz zwischen Stoßrelaxation und Dissoziation der schwingungsangeregten Acetylradikale (CH3CO#) zurückgeführt. Für das System Aceton / 266 nm wird keine Druckabhängigkeit von Phi(CH3) = 0,93 ± 0,1 beobachtet. Dies wird damit erklärt, dass CH3CO# nicht genügend Energie besitzt, um die Barriere zur Dissoziation zu überschreiten. Bei der Photolyse von Acetylbromid bei 248 nm wird druckunabhängig Phi(CH3) = 0,92 ± 0,10 bestimmt. In diesem System dissoziieren die schwingungsangeregten Acetylradikale bei allen Drücken vollständig. Bei 266 nm wurde die Gesamtquantenausbeute für die Photodissoziation von Aceton (Phi(diss, 266nm)) bestimmt. Die nach Photolyse erhaltenen Methyl - und Acetylradikale wurden nach Titration mit Br2 durch die Resonanzfluoreszenz der Bromatome detektiert. Phi(diss, 266nm) wurde mit 0,92 ± 0,07 bestimmt.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The collapse of linear polyelectrolyte chains in a poor solvent: When does a collapsing polyelectrolyte collect its counter ions? The collapse of polyions in a poor solvent is a complex system and is an active research subject in the theoretical polyelectrolyte community. The complexity is due to the subtle interplay between hydrophobic effects, electrostatic interactions, entropy elasticity, intrinsic excluded volume as well as specific counter-ion and co-ion properties. Long range Coulomb forces can obscure single molecule properties. The here presented approach is to use just a small amount of screening salt in combination with a very high sample dilution in order to screen intermolecular interaction whereas keeping intramolecular interaction as much as possible (polyelectrolyte concentration cp ≤ 12 mg/L, salt concentration; Cs = 10^-5 mol/L). This is so far not described in literature. During collapse, the polyion is subject to a drastic change in size along with strong reduction of free counterions in solution. Therefore light scattering was utilized to obtain the size of the polyion whereas a conductivity setup was developed to monitor the proceeding of counterion collection by the polyion. Partially quaternized PVP’s below and above the Manning limit were investigated and compared to the collapse of their uncharged precursor. The collapses were induced by an isorefractive solvent/non-solvent mixture consisting of 1-propanol and 2-pentanone, with nearly constant dielectric constant. The solvent quality for the uncharged polyion could be quantified which, for the first time, allowed the experimental investigation of the effect of electrostatic interaction prior and during polyion collapse. Given that the Manning parameter M for QPVP4.3 is as low as lB / c = 0.6 (lB the Bjerrum length and c the mean contour distance between two charges), no counterion binding should occur. However the Walden product reduces with first addition of non solvent and accelerates when the structural collapse sets in. Since the dielectric constant of the solvent remains virtually constant during the chain collapse, the counterion binding is entirely caused by the reduction in the polyion chain dimension. The collapse is shifted to lower wns with higher degrees of quaternization as the samples QPVP20 and QPVP35 show (M = 2.8 respectively 4.9). The combination of light scattering and conductivity measurement revealed for the first time that polyion chains already collect their counter ions well above the theta-dimension when the dimensions start to shrink. Due to only small amounts of screening salt, strong electrostatic interactions bias dynamic as well as static light scattering measurements. An extended Zimm formula was derived to account for this interaction and to obtain the real chain dimensions. The effective degree of dissociation g could be obtained semi quantitatively using this extrapolated static in combination with conductivity measurements. One can conclude the expansion factor a and the effective degree of ionization of the polyion to be mutually dependent. In the good solvent regime g of QPVP4.3, QPVP20 and QPVP35 exhibited a decreasing value in the order 1 > g4.3 > g20 > g35. The low values of g for QPVP20 and QPVP35 are assumed to be responsible for the prior collapse of the higher quaternized samples. Collapse theory predicts dipole-dipole attraction to increase accordingly and even predicts a collapse in the good solvent regime. This could be exactly observed for the QPVP35 sample. The experimental results were compared to a newly developed theory of uniform spherical collapse induced by concomitant counterion binding developed by M. Muthukumar and A. Kundagrami. The theory agrees qualitatively with the location of the phase boundary as well as the trend of an increasing expansion with an increase of the degree of quaternization. However experimental determined g for the samples QPVP4.3, QPVP20 and QPVP35 decreases linearly with the degree of quaternization whereas this theory predicts an almost constant value.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The systematic exploration of excited meson and baryon states was the central topic of the COMPASS physics program in the years 2008 and 2009 at the CERN facility. A hadron beam of 190 GeV/c particle momentum was impinging on a 40 cm long liquid hydrogen target to create excited states of beam particles by diffractive processes. The presented work is about the study of the process $K^- p rightarrow K^- pi^+ pi^- p_{recoil}$ where special emphasis is put on how kaons were distinguished from pions with the CEDAR detectors in the initial channel as well as with the RICH detector in the final states. At the end formed 270 000 events an invariant K pi pi mass distribution of overlapping resonances. In addition a detailed MC simulation study of 44 million decays in the range of 0.8 < m(K pi pi) [GeV/c^2] < 3.0 was performed and analysed for acceptance corrections.All information was combined into a mass independent partial wave analysis to observe resonances of individual particles. The main contribution was found in the JP = 0+, 1+, 2- and 2+ spin-parity states.