Micron-sized flower-like particles with plate-like titania petals were prepared by acid and posthydrothermal treatment of flower-like lithium titanate hydrate (LTH). Hydrolysis of titanium alkoxide and ethanol washing were used to create porous hydrous titania particles with spherical shapes. Hydrothermal treatment in LiOH aqueous solution resulted in the formation of plate-like crystals of LTH on hydrous titania particles. Li ions were removed with maintaining the appearance of the original flower-like particles by stirring in 0.1 M hydrochloric acid. In addition, the crystallinity of the particles as anatase was improved by hydrothermal treatment in pure water. Although having a micron-order size, the obtained particles showed almost the same photodegradation ability of Evans blue under ultraviolet irradiation as AEROXIDE® TiO2 P25.
A novel diaminomethyleneindenedione (DMI) organocatalyst efficiently promotes the asymmetric conjugate addition of a ketone to a maleimide to afford the corresponding addition product in a high yield with up to 99% enantiomeric excess.
Abstract β-1,4-glucosaminoglucan (GG) was prepared from the sheath of a sulfur-oxidizing bacterium Thiothrix nivea. Recently, GG was found to be adsorbed by cellulose (paper) and is therefore potentially applicable as an aminating agent for cellulose. We attempted to increase the yield of GG using a fed-batch cultivation method. Furthermore, the behavior of GG molecules in water was theoretically and experimentally investigated. NMR analysis in combination with molecular dynamics calculation suggested that GG molecules tend to form soluble aggregates in water. It was experimentally revealed that the self-aggregation is enhanced by the addition of NaCl and reduced temperature. Adsorption of GG onto cellulose via hydrogen bonding was confirmed by molecular dynamics simulation. Adsorption was also promoted in the presence of NaCl but was inhibited by a reduction in temperature. Only 11% of the amino groups in the GG-treated paper was reactive, suggesting that GG molecules adsorbed by the paper were forming aggregates.
Necrosis, a form of cell death, occurs not only with the development of various diseases but also with a tumor tissue response to cancer treatment. Therefore, pursuing progress for cancer therapy through induction of necrosis may be one of the most effective approaches for cancer eradication. We herein describe the development of a real-time imaging system to visualize intratumoral necrosis. The system is composed of two types of cells expressing either one of two necrosis imaging reporters that consist of a DnaE intein sequence linking to one of two split-luciferase fragments. When necrosis occurs in a tumor composed of both of the cells, the two types of leaked reporters can reconstitute the enzymatic activity as a result of protein trans-splicing and thereby emit bioluminescence in the presence of the substrate. This system, which was constructed with shrimp-derived luciferase, allowed in vitro imaging of necrosis. We further confirmed real-time imaging of intratumoral necrosis caused by physical or chemical tissue disruption, validating its application in in vivo necrosis imaging. Thus, the constructed imaging system could be a powerful tool for the optimization of the therapeutic condition for cancer therapy and for the evaluation of novel anticancer drugs targeting necrosis. Necrosis, a form of cell death, occurs not only with the development of various diseases but also with a tumor tissue response to cancer treatment. Therefore, pursuing progress for cancer therapy through induction of necrosis may be one of the most effective approaches for cancer eradication. We herein describe the development of a real-time imaging system to visualize intratumoral necrosis. The system is composed of two types of cells expressing either one of two necrosis imaging reporters that consist of a DnaE intein sequence linking to one of two split-luciferase fragments. When necrosis occurs in a tumor composed of both of the cells, the two types of leaked reporters can reconstitute the enzymatic activity as a result of protein trans-splicing and thereby emit bioluminescence in the presence of the substrate. This system, which was constructed with shrimp-derived luciferase, allowed in vitro imaging of necrosis. We further confirmed real-time imaging of intratumoral necrosis caused by physical or chemical tissue disruption, validating its application in in vivo necrosis imaging. Thus, the constructed imaging system could be a powerful tool for the optimization of the therapeutic condition for cancer therapy and for the evaluation of novel anticancer drugs targeting necrosis.