981 resultados para Macrocycle, Zinc(II), Cadmium(II), Coordination polymer, X-ray, Dibenzotetraaza[14]annulene


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The development of crystalline lamellae in ultra-thin layers of poly(ethylene terephthalate) PET confined between polycarbonate (PC) layers in an alternating assembly is investigated as a function of layer thickness by means of X-ray diffraction methods. Isothermal crystallization from the glassy state is in-situ followed by means of small-angle X-ray diffraction. It is found that the reduced size of the PET layers influences the lamellar nanostructure and induces a preferential lamellar orientation. Two lamellar populations, flat-on and edge-on, are found to coexist in a wide range of crystallization temperatures (Tc = 117–150 °C) and within layer thicknesses down to 35 nm. Flat-on lamellae appear at a reduced crystallization rate with respect to bulk PET giving rise to crystals of similar dimensions separated by larger amorphous regions. In addition, a narrower distribution of lamellar orientations develops when the layer thickness is reduced or the crystallization temperature is raised. In case of edge-on lamellae, crystallization conditions also influence the development of lamellar orientation; however, the latter is little affected by the reduced size of the layers. Results suggest that flat-on lamellae arise as a consequence of spatial confinement and edge-on lamellae could be generated due to the interactions with the PC interface. En este trabajo se investiga mediante difracción de rayos X a ángulos bajos (SAXS) y a ángulos altos (WAXS), la cristalización de láminas delgadas de Polietilén tereftalato (PET) confinadas entre láminas de Policarbonato (PC), tomando como referencia PET sin confinar. El espesor de las capas de PET varía entre 35nm y 115 nm. Se realizaron medidas de difracción a tres temperaturas de cristalización (117ºC, 132ºC y 150ºC) encontrándose que el reducido espesor de las capas de PET influye en la estructura lamelar que se desarrolla, induciendo una orientación preferente de las láminas. Se integró la intensidad difractada alrededor del máximo en SAXS para obtener una representación de la intensidad en función del ángulo acimutal. Mediante análisis de mínimos cuadrados se separó la curva experimental obtenida en tres contribuciones diferentes: una función Gausiana que describe la distribución de las orientaciones de las lamelas, una función lorenziana asociada a los máximos meridionales (asociados a las interfases PET-PC) y un background constante. Por otra parte la cantidad de material cristalizado se estimó asumiendo que la intensidad del background en el barrido acimutal, una vez restado el background del primer difractograma (sin máximos en SAXS) se asocia con la contribución del material isotrópico que resta en la muestra cristalizada. Se observa la coexistencia de dos poblaciones de lamelas: flat-on y edge-on. A medida que el espesor de las láminas de PET disminuye la población de las lamelas flat-on experimenta los siguientes cambios: 1) la distribución de orientación se estrecha, 2) la fracción de material cristalizado orientado aumenta, 3) la cinética de cristalización se ralentiza y 4) el largo espaciado aumenta es decir las regiones amorfas entre lamelas aumentan su tamaño. Parece demostrarse que es en las primeras etapas del crecimiento lamelar cuando la restricción espacial fuerza a las lamelas a esta orientación tipo flat-on frente a la orientación edge-on.

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In many biological membranes, the major lipids are “non-bilayer lipids,” which in purified form cannot be arranged in a lamellar structure. The structural and functional roles of these lipids are poorly understood. This work demonstrates that the in vitro association of the two main components of a membrane, the non-bilayer lipid monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and the chlorophyll-a/b light-harvesting antenna protein of photosystem II (LHCII) of pea thylakoids, leads to the formation of large, ordered lamellar structures: (i) thin-section electron microscopy and circular dichroism spectroscopy reveal that the addition of MGDG induces the transformation of isolated, disordered macroaggregates of LHCII into stacked lamellar aggregates with a long-range chiral order of the complexes; (ii) small-angle x-ray scattering discloses that LHCII perturbs the structure of the pure lipid and destroys the inverted hexagonal phase; and (iii) an analysis of electron micrographs of negatively stained 2D crystals indicates that in MGDG-LHCII the complexes are found in an ordered macroarray. It is proposed that, by limiting the space available for MGDG in the macroaggregate, LHCII inhibits formation of the inverted hexagonal phase of lipids; in thylakoids, a spatial limitation is likely to be imposed by the high concentration of membrane-associated proteins.

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The chloroperoxidase (EC 1.11.1.-) from the fungus Curvularia inaequalis belongs to a class of vanadium enzymes that oxidize halides in the presence of hydrogen peroxide to the corresponding hypohalous acids. The 2.1 A crystal structure (R = 20%) of an azide chloroperoxidase complex reveals the geometry of the catalytic vanadium center. Azide coordinates directly to the metal center, resulting in a structure with azide, three nonprotein oxygens, and a histidine as ligands. In the native state vanadium will be bound as hydrogen vanadate(V) in a trigonal bipyramidal coordination with the metal coordinated to three oxygens in the equatorial plane, to the OH group at one apical position, and to the epsilon 2 nitrogen of a histidine at the other apical position. The protein fold is mainly alpha-helical with two four-helix bundles as main structural motifs and an overall structure different from other structures. The helices pack together to a compact molecule, which explains the high stability of the protein. An amino acid sequence comparison with vanadium-containing bromoperoxidase from the seaweed Ascophyllum nodosum shows high similarities in the regions of the metal binding site, with all hydrogen vanadate(V) interacting residues conserved except for lysine-353, which is an asparagine.