A theoretical study of the complexes formed between dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and hypohalous acid (HOX, X = Cl, Br, and I) has been carried out at the MP2/aug-cc-pVTZ level. For each HOX, four minima binary complexes were found, two mainly with an OH•••O hydrogen bond and the other two with an OX•••O halogen bond. The hydrogen-bonded complexes are more stable than the halogen-bonded analogues for HOCl and HOBr, while both types of complexes have similar stability in the iodine case. A red shift was found for the associated H–O and X–O bond stretch vibrations and a small blue shift for the distant bonds. As the oxygen of DMSO simultaneously binds with two HOCl molecules, the corresponding interactions are weakened with diminutive effect. This diminutive effect is the largest in the complexes with two OH•••O hydrogen bonds but the smallest in those with two OCl•••O halogen bonds.
The cooperativity between the O-H...O and C-H...O hydrogen bonds has been studied by quantum chemical calculations at the MP2/6-311++G(d,p) level in gaseous phase and at the B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) level in solution. The interaction energies of the O-H...O and C-H...O H-bonds are increased by 53 and 58%, respectively, demonstrating that there is a large cooperativity. Analysis of hydrogen-bonding lengths, OH bond lengths, and OH stretching frequencies also supports such a conclusion. By NBO analysis, it is found that orbital interaction plays a great role in enhancing their cooperativity. The strength increase of the C-H...O H-bond is larger than that of the O-H...O H-bond due to the cooperativity. The solvent has a weakening effect on the cooperativity.
During fertilization, the parental genome undergoes extensive demethylation. Global DNA demethylation is a hallmark of epigenetic reprogramming. Embryos engage non-canonical DNA methylation maintenance mechanisms to ensure inheritance of exceptional germline features. However, the mechanisms ensuring demethylation resistance in light of global reprogramming remain poorly understood. TRIM28 is a maternal-effect factor that controls genomic imprinting during early embryonic reprogramming. In this study, cytoplasmic injections of siRNA were performed into oocytes matured in vitro for 26h to interfere with the expression of TRIM28 in oocytes. The injected oocytes were continually matured in vitro until 42h and used to construct somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) embryos. During 2-cell to blastocyst stages, the expression of development-related genes (NANOG, POU5F1, CDX2, BAX, and BCL2), maternal imprinting genes (IGF2, DIO3, PLAGL1, and DLK1), paternal imprinting genes (H19 and PEG3), TRIM28-recruitment complex-associated genes (ZFP57, PGC7, SETDB1, and DNMT), and epigenetic chromatin modification enzymes were detected by quantitative PCR in the constructed TRIM28-interfered SCNT embryos. The DNA methylation levels in the promoter regions of the imprinted genes (H19 and IGF2) and chromatin repeats (PRE-1 and SATELLITE) were analysed by sodium bisulfite genomic sequencing. The results showed that the TRIM28-interfered SCNT embryos had significantly lower cleavage and blastocyst rates (53.9±3.4% and 12.1±4.3%, respectively) than those in control SCNT embryos (64.8±2.7% and 18.8±1.9%, respectively). The expression levels of development-related genes (NANOG and POU5F1) and TRIM28-recruited transcriptional repression complex-associated genes (PGC7, ZFP57, and DNMT1) in the 4-cell stage were significantly reduced (P<0.05). The imprinted genes were significantly up-regulated (P<0.05) from the 2-cell to blastocyst stage in constructed TRIM28-interfered SCNT embryos, except H19 at the 2-cell and blastocyst stage decreased remarkably (P<0.05). The DNA methylation levels of IGF2 decreased 2-fold from the 2-cell to blastocyst stage in TRIM28-interfered SCNT embryos. The PRE-1 and SATELLITE had a remarkably lower (P<0.05) methylation levels in the TRIM28-interfered 2-cell embryos than in control SCNT embryos. The cluster analysis showed some of the chromatin modification enzymes had abnormal expression in the TRIM28-interfered SCNT embryos, especially in the 8-cell stage, where 48 enzymes were significantly decreased (P<0.05). The down-regulation enzymes were mainly clustered in the histone H3K4 methyl transferase and histone acetylase. These results indicate that down-regulation of maternal TRIM28 breaks the steady-state of genomic methylation at a particular locus of the imprinted gene, disrupts the expression of imprinted gene and epigenetic modifications enzymes, and is detrimental to normal development of SCNT embryos. Maternal TRIM28 is needed in maintaining a stable state of genomic methylation and epigenetic modification state during SCNT embryo development.
MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ calculations have been used to provide information on the three ternary systems comprising one HNC and two HF molecules. The binding distances, frequency shifts, and interaction energies in these systems have been analysed to study the cooperativity of hydrogen bond in these systems. The cooperativity of hydrogen bond in HNC–HF–HF trimer is larger than that in HF–HF–HNC trimer. The result indicates that the proton acceptor HNC plays a more important role in enhancing the cooperativity of hydrogen bond. Many-body interaction analyses have also been performed for these ternary systems.
Abstract The lithium‐ and hydrogen‐bonded complex of HLiNCHNCH is studied with ab initio calculations. The optimized structure, vibrational frequencies, and binding energy are calculated at the MP2 level with 6‐311++G(2d,2p) basis set. The interplay between lithium bonding and hydrogen bonding in the complex is investigated with these properties. The effect of lithium bonding on the properties of hydrogen bonding is larger than that of hydrogen bonding on the properties of lithium bonding. In the trimer, the binding energies are increased by about 19 % and 61 % for the lithium and hydrogen bonds, respectively. A big cooperative energy (−5.50 kcal mol −1 ) is observed in the complex. Both the charge transfer and induction effect due to the electrostatic interaction are responsible for the cooperativity in the trimer. The effect of HCN chain length on the lithium bonding has been considered. The natural bond orbital and atoms in molecules analyses indicate that the electrostatic force plays a main role in the lithium bonding. A many‐body interaction analysis has also been performed for HLi(NCH) N ( N =2–5) systems.