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Nucleic acid sequences rich in guanines can organize into noncanonical DNA G-quadruplexes (G4s) of variable size. The design of small molecules stabilizing the structure of G4s is a rapidly growing area for the development of novel anticancer therapeutic strategies and bottom-up nanotechnologies. Among a multitude of binders, porphyrins are very attractive due to their light activation that can make them valuable conformational regulators of G4s. Here, a structure-based strategy, integrating complementary probes, is employed to study the interaction between TMPyP4 porphyrin and a 22-base human telomeric sequence (Tel22) before and after irradiation with blue light. Porphyrin binding is discovered to promote Tel22 dimerization, while light irradiation of the Tel22-TMPyP4 complex controls dimer fraction. Such a change in quaternary structure is found to be strictly correlated with modifications at the secondary structure level, thus providing an unprecedented link between the degree of dimerization and the underlying conformational changes in G4s.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c01840 | DOI Listing |
Organometallics
August 2025
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California 95064, United States.
Despite the widespread occurrence of CO poisoning and the number of people left underserved by current treatment options, there are no clinically employed CO poisoning antidotes. Current efforts to develop candidate antidotes have focused on Fe-(II) complexes with a high binding affinity for CO, with small-molecule Fe-(II) porphyrin complexes demonstrating promising potential in this role. The well-established organometallic chemistry of group 8 metals suggests that Ru-(II) and Os-(II) analogs should be able to form even more stable carbonyl adducts than their Fe-(II) congeners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Vivo
August 2025
Division of Oral Diagnosis and General Dentistry, Department of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Sciences, Meikai University School of Dentistry, Sakado, Japan.
Background/aim: Eugenol dimer (-eugenol), a representative ortho-bisphenol, has been reported to have potent antioxidant/anti-inflammatory activity. To clarify the antioxidant/anti-inflammatory mechanisms of -eugenol, we investigated its involvement in heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression and anti-inflammatory activity.
Materials And Methods: HO-1 expression in RAW264.
J Am Chem Soc
August 2025
Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford, Chemistry Research Laboratory, Oxford OX1 3TA, U.K.
What is the size limit for global aromaticity? How large can a macrocyclic π-system be and still exhibit an aromatic ring current around its circumference? We address this question by investigating a π-conjugated butadiyne-linked 18-porphyrin nanoring (diameter 8 nm). This nanoring was synthesized by two different strategies: classical template-directed synthesis, using a radial template with 18 pyridyl binding sites, and Vernier templating, using a small hexapyridyl template. Both strategies are effective when the porphyrins have octyloxy side chains, but classical templating is more effective than Vernier templating when the porphyrins have bulky trihexylsilyl substituents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
August 2025
Instituto de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento - CONICET Los Polvorines Argentina
We present a biomimetic electrochemical sensor for glyphosate (GLY) detection, utilizing graphite electrodes modified with electropolymerized copper(ii) meso-tetra(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (CuP). The Cu(ii) centers provide dual functionality: catalytic oxygen reduction and selective GLY coordination, which leads to a proportional suppression of redox currents. Characterization (SEM-EDS/Raman/UV-Vis) confirmed CuP polymerization and specific GLY binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
Department of Inflammation and Immunity, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Heme is an iron-containing cofactor generated in mitochondria that must leave this organelle to reach protein targets in other cell compartments. Because mitochondrial heme binding by cytosolic GAPDH enables its distribution in cells, we sought to uncover how heme reaches GAPDH. Experiments utilizing two human cell lines and a GAPDH reporter protein whose heme binding can be followed by fluorescence reveal that the mitochondrial protein FLVCR1b provides heme to GAPDH in concert with a rise and fall in their association.
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