• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Bis-pyrene probes of foldamer conformation in solution and in phospholipid bilayers

20 February 2020 (has links)
Yes / Exploring the detailed structural features of synthetic molecules in the membrane phase requires sensitive probes of conformation. Here we describe the design, synthesis and characterization of bis(pyrene) probes that report conformational changes in membrane-active dynamic foldamers. The probes were designed to distinguish between left-handed (M) and right-handed (P) screw-sense conformers of 310-helical α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) peptide foldamers, both in solution and in bilayer membranes. Several different bis(pyrene) probes were synthesized and ligated to the C-terminus of Aib tetramers that had different chiral residues at the N-terminus, residues that favored either an M or a P screw-sense in the 310-helix. The readily synthesized and conveniently incorporated N-acetyl-1,2-bis(pyren-1′-yl)ethylenediamine probe proved to have the best properties. In solution, changes in foldamer screw-sense induced substantial changes in the ratio of excimer/monomer fluorescence emission (E/M) for this reporter of conformation, with X-ray crystallography revealing that opposite screw-senses produce very different interpyrene distances in the reporter. In bilayers, this convenient and sensitive fluorescent reporter allowed, for the first time, an investigation of how the chirality of natural phospholipids affects foldamer conformation. / European Research Council (Advanced Grant ROCOCO), the BBSRC (DTP studentship and grant BB/I007962) and the EPRSC (grants EP/N009134/1 and EP/ K039547).
2

Etude de l'interaction des nouveaux dérivés de Hoechst 33258 avec l'ADN et d’induction d’excimères en présence d’ADN de différentes sondes pyrénylées / Study of the interaction of new derivatives of Hoechst 33258 with DNA and pyrene probes excimer formation induced by nucleic acids

Amirbekyan, Karen 14 October 2016 (has links)
Le développement de nouvelles molécules capables d’intéragir avec l’ADN, leur mode d’intéraction et leur affinité est un domaine de recherche particulièrement important. Dans ce travail nous avons étudié les interactions avec l’ADN de la molécule Hoechst 33258 connu pour être un ligand du petit sillon ainsi que plusieurs de ces analogues.Dans un premier temps nous avons étudié la stabilité des complexes ADN-Hoechst 33258 en solution avec et sans DMSO comme co-solvant. Deuxièmement, les affinités de dérivés nouvellement conçus et synthétisés du Hoechst 33258 vis-à-vis de l'ADN ont été évaluées. Enfin, nous avons étudiés la capacité d’induction d’excimers en présence d’ADN de différentes molécules pyrénylées. Ces études ont été effectuées par différentes méthodes spectroscopiques, telles que l'absorbance UV-visible, la fluorescence, le dichroïsme circulaire, la spectroscopie de masse ESI et de la modélisation moléculaire. / The development of new DNA binders and the evaluation of their affinity toward DNA as well as their mode of binding is an area of research of prime importance. In this thesis we studied the interactions of Hoechst 33258, a well-known groove binder, as well as some of its newly synthesized derivatives with DNA. The stability of DNA-Hoechst 33258 complex in solution with and without DMSO as a co-solvent was evaluated.Secondly, the affinities of newly designed and synthesized derivatives of Hoechst 33258 toward DNA were evaluated. Finally, a set of pyrene derivatives able to induced excimer formation upon binding to DNA were studied. Different spectroscopic methods, such as UV-vis absorbance, fluorescence, circular dichroism, ESI mass spectroscopy and molecular docking were applied for the complete evaluation of the affinity of these ligands toward DNA.

Page generated in 0.0478 seconds