2 resultados para Organic compounds Properties Synthesis.
em Digital Commons - Michigan Tech
Resumo:
Atmospheric aerosol water-soluble organic compounds (WSOC) exist in a complex mixture of thousands of organic compounds which may have a significant influence on the climate-relevant properties of the atmospheric aerosol. To understand the potential influences, the ambient aerosol was collected at a nonurban mountainous site near Steamboat Springs, CO. The WSOC fraction was analyzed using positive and negative electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry. Approximately 2400 and 4000 molecular formulas were identified from the detected positive and negative ions, respectively. The formulas contained carbon (C), hydrogen (H), oxygen (O), nitrogen (N), and sulfur (S) atoms over the mass range of 100-800 Da in both ionization modes. The number range of double bond equivalents (DBE), the mean O:C, H:C, and oxidation state of carbon for the positive ions were 0 – 18, 0.25 ± 0.15, 1.39 ± 0.29, and -0.89 ± 0.23, respectively. Comparatively, the negative ion values were 0 – 14, 0.53 ± 0.20, 1.48 ± 0.30, and -0.41 ± 0.45, respectively. Overall, the positive ion molecular formulas were less oxygenated than negative ions as seen with the lower O:C and OSc values. Molecular formulas of the positive ions classified as aliphatic, olefinic, and aromatic compound classes based on the aromaticity index values. Aliphatic compounds were the CHNO and CHO formulas that had mean DBE values of about 5 and 3, respectively. However, a majority of the CHOS, CHNOS, and CHS formulas were defined as olefinic compounds and had mean DBE values of about 12, 13, and 10, respectively. Overall, more than half of the assigned molecular formulas contained sulfur and were olefinic to aromatic compounds with a DBE range of 7-18. Source of the unsaturated sulfur containing compounds is currently unknown. Several nitrogen containing compounds were in common with the field and laboratory studies of the biomass burning aerosol and aged secondary organic aerosol products of the limonene ozonolysis.
Resumo:
Oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) containing latent electrophilic groups can be highly useful in antisense drug development and many other applications such as chemical biology and medicine, where covalent cross-linking of ODNs with mRNA, protein and ODN is required. However, such ODN analogues cannot be synthesized using traditional technologies due to the strongly nucleophilic conditions used in traditional deprotection/cleavage process. To solve this long lasting and highly challenging problem in nucleic acid chemistry, I used the 1,3-dithian-2-yl-methoxycarbonyl (Dmoc) function to protect the exo-amino groups on the nucleobases dA, dC and dG, and to design the linker between the nascent ODN and solid support. These protecting groups and linker are completely stable under all ODN synthesis conditions, but can be readily cleaved under non-nucleophilic and nearly neutral conditions. As a result, the new ODN synthesis technology is universally useful for the synthesis of electrophilic ODNs. The dissertation is mainly comprised of two portions. In the first portion, the development of the Dmoc-based linker for ODN synthesis will be described. The construction of the dT-Dmoc-linker required a total of seven steps to synthesize. The linker was then anchored to the solid support―controlled pore glass (CPG). In the second portion, the syntheses of Dmoc-protected phosphoramidites ODN synthesis monomers including Dmoc-dC-amidite, Dmoc-dA-amidite, Dmoc-dG-amidite are described. The protection of dC and dA with 1,3-dithian-2-yl-methyl 4-nitrophenyl carbonate proceeded smoothly giving Dmoc-dC and Dmoc-dA in good yields. However, when the same acylation procedure was applied for the synthesis of Dmoc-dG, very low yield was obtained. This problem was later solved using a highly innovative and environmentally benign procedure, which is expected to be widely useful for the acylation of the exo-amino groups on nucleoside bases. The reactions to convert the Dmoc-protected nucleosides to phosphoramidite monomers proceeded smoothly with high yields. Using the Dmoc phosphoramidite monomers dA, dC, dG and the commercially available dT, and the Dmoc linker, four ODN sequences were synthesized. In all cases, excellent coupling yields were obtained. ODN deprotection/cleavage was achieved by using non-nucleophilic oxidative conditions. The new technology is predicted to be universally useful for the synthesis of ODNs containing one or more electrophilic functionalities.