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  2. Examinar por materia

Examinando por Materia "chemical structure"

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    Ítem
    Effect of chemical composition and microstructure on the mechanical behavior of fish scales from Megalops Atlanticus
    (ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 2016-03-01) Gil-Duran, S.; Arola, D.; Ossa, E.A.; Gil-Duran, S.; Arola, D.; Ossa, E.A.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería de Producción; Materiales de Ingeniería
    This paper presents an experimental study of the composition, microstructure and mechanical behavior of scales from the Megalops Atlanticus (Atlantic tarpon). The microstructure and composition were evaluated by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and RAMAN spectroscopy, respectively. The mechanical properties were evaluated in uniaxial tension as a function of position along the length of the fish (head, mid-length and tail). Results showed that the scales are composed of collagen and hydroxyapatite, and these constituents are distributed within three well-defined layers from the bottom to the top of the scale. The proportion of these layers with respect to the total scale thickness varies radially. The collagen fibers are arranged in plies with different orientations and with preferred orientation in the longitudinal direction of the fish. Results from the tensile tests showed that scales from Megalops Atlanticus exhibit variations in the elastic modulus as a function of body position. Additional testing performed with and without the highly mineralized top layers of the scale revealed that the mechanical behavior is anisotropic and that the highest strength was exhibited along the fish length. Furthermore, removing the top mineralized layers resulted in an increase in the tensile strength of the scale. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
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    Ítem
    Evolutionary and sequence-based relationships in bacterial AdoMet-dependent non-coding RNA methyltransferases
    (BioMed Central Ltd., 2014-01-01) Mosquera-Rendón, J.; Cárdenas-Brito, S.; Pineda, J.D.; Corredor, M.; Benítez-Páez, A.; Mosquera-Rendón, J.; Cárdenas-Brito, S.; Pineda, J.D.; Corredor, M.; Benítez-Páez, A.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería de Sistemas; I+D+I en Tecnologías de la Información y las Comunicaciones
    Background: RNA post-transcriptional modification is an exciting field of research that has evidenced this editing process as a sophisticated epigenetic mechanism to fine tune the ribosome function and to control gene expression. Although tRNA modifications seem to be more relevant for the ribosome function and cell physiology as a whole, some rRNA modifications have also been seen to play pivotal roles, essentially those located in central ribosome regions. RNA methylation at nucleobases and ribose moieties of nucleotides appear to frequently modulate its chemistry and structure. RNA methyltransferases comprise a superfamily of highly specialized enzymes that accomplish a wide variety of modifications. These enzymes exhibit a poor degree of sequence similarity in spite of using a common reaction cofactor and modifying the same substrate type. Results: Relationships and lineages of RNA methyltransferases have been extensively discussed, but no consensus has been reached. To shed light on this topic, we performed amino acid and codon-based sequence analyses to determine phylogenetic relationships and molecular evolution. We found that most Class I RNA MTases are evolutionarily related to protein and cofactor/vitamin biosynthesis methyltransferases. Additionally, we found that at least nine lineages explain the diversity of RNA MTases. We evidenced that RNA methyltransferases have high content of polar and positively charged amino acid, which coincides with the electrochemistry of their substrates. Conclusions: After studying almost 12,000 bacterial genomes and 2,000 patho-pangenomes, we revealed that molecular evolution of Class I methyltransferases matches the different rates of synonymous and non-synonymous substitutions along the coding region. Consequently, evolution on Class I methyltransferases selects against amino acid changes affecting the structure conformation. © 2014 Mosquera-Rendón et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
  • No hay miniatura disponible
    Ítem
    Insights into the structure and stability of the carbonic acid dimer
    (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2010-01-01) Murillo, Juliana; David, Jorge; Restrepo, Albeiro; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias Básicas; Electromagnetismo Aplicado (Gema)
    In this paper we report the geometries and properties of 40 structural isomers located on the MP2/6-311++G** PES of the carbonic acid dimer. All six possible combinations of carbonic acid monomers were considered. The dimers are divided into six geometrical motifs. Our data suggests that combinations of anti-anti monomers do not necessarily lead to larger stabilization energies in the formation of the dimers. MP2 underestimates the relative binding energies with respect to CCSD(T) by as much as 3.2 kcal mol-1. At least 3 different dimers which may contribute to the stability of carbonic acid are predicted to have significant populations. Binding energy is only directly related to relative stability when comparing dimers formed from the same monomers. Overall stabilization is mainly dictated by attractive electrostatic interactions via cooperative polarization by virtue of the spatial arrangement of the dipole moment components along the polar bonds. Shorter O…H bond distances and larger bond orders predicted for the hydrogen bonds directed towards carbonyl groups make for stronger hydrogen bonding than in O…H bonds directed towards hydroxyl groups. © the Owner Societies.
  • No hay miniatura disponible
    Ítem
    Microsolvation of dimethylphosphate: A molecular model for the interaction of cell membranes with water
    (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2013-01-01) Ibargueen, Cesar; Manrique-Moreno, Marcela; Hadad, C. Z.; David, Jorge; Restrepo, Albeiro; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias Básicas; Electromagnetismo Aplicado (Gema)
    We present an exhaustive stochastic search of the quantum conformational spaces of the (CH3O)2PO2 - + nH 2O (n = 1,2,3) systems. We uncover structural, conformational and energetic features of the problem. As in the isolated species, clusters containing the gauche-gauche (gg) conformation of dimethylphosphate (DMP -) are energetically preferred, however, contributions from hydrated gauche-anti (ga) and anti-anti (aa) monomers cannot be neglected because such structures are quite common and because they are close in energy to those containing the gg monomer. At least seven distinct types of O?H-O-H contacts lead to DMP- ? water interactions that are always stabilizing, but not strong enough to induce significant changes in the geometries of either DMP- or water units. Our results lead us to postulate DMP- to be a suitable model to study explicit and detailed aspects of microsolvation of cell membranes. This journal is © 2013 the Owner Societies.
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    Ítem
    Structural characterization of the (MeSH)4 potential energy surface
    (SPRINGER, 2013-05-01) Gomez, Sara; Guerra, Doris; David, Jorge; Restrepo, Albeiro; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias Básicas; Electromagnetismo Aplicado (Gema)
    A random walk on the PES for (MeSH)4 clusters produced 50 structural isomers held together by hydrogenbonding networks according to calculations performed at the B3LYP/6-311++G* * andMP2/6-311++G* * levels. The geometric motifs observed are somewhat similar to those encountered for the methanol tetramer, but the interactions responsible for cluster stabilization are quite different in origin. Cluster stabilization is not related to the number of hydrogen bonds. Two distinct, well-defined types of hydrogen bonds scattered over a wide range of distances are predicted. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2012.
  • No hay miniatura disponible
    Ítem
    Structural characterization of the (methanol)4 potential energy surface
    (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2009-09-24) David, Jorge; Guerra, Doris; Restrepo, Albeiro; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias Básicas; Electromagnetismo Aplicado (Gema)
    In this paper, we report the geometries and properties of the structural isomers obtained from a random walk of the potential energy surface (PES) of the methanol tetramer. Thirty-three structures were obtained after B3LYP/6-31+g* optimization of 94 candidate structures generated from a stochastic search of the PM3 conformational space. The random search was carried out using a recently proposed modified Metropolis acceptance test in the simulated annealing (SA) procedure. Corrections for the basis set superposition error (BSSE) show improvements on the binding energies of the clusters in an average of approximately 2.0 kcal/mol, while geometries are predicted to be less sensitive to BSSE corrections. MP2/aug-cc-pvdz calculations on representative structures did not change the geometries but predicted better binding energies. Highly correlated CCSD(T) energies were calculated on the B3LYP and MP2 stationary points and used to establish relative stabilities. We report several new conformations and group the structures into six distinct geometrical motifs. Only the cyclic tetramers with four primary hydrogen bonds in the same plane are predicted to have significant populations. Secondary hydrogen bonds, those for which the donated proton comes from an alkyl group, lead to a rich conformational space.
  • No hay miniatura disponible
    Ítem
    Structures, energies, and bonding in the water heptamer
    (AMER INST PHYSICS, 2013-07-28) Acelas, Nancy; Hincapie, Gina; Guerra, Doris; David, Jorge; Restrepo, Albeiro; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias Básicas; Electromagnetismo Aplicado (Gema)
    In this paper we report the geometries and properties of 38 distinct geometrical motifs located on the B3LYP/6-31+G(d), MP2/6-311++G(d, p) potential energy surfaces of the water heptamer. Binding energies of up to 45 kcal/mol are calculated. All motifs fall within 10 kcal/mol of the most stable conformation, with at least 13 structural patterns located no more than 3 kcal/mol above, leading to a very complex potential energy surface, populated by a multitude of motifs each one allowing large numbers of conformations. Cluster stability does not seem to be correlated with the number of hydrogen bonds. Compact structures are energetically favored by electronic energies with zero-point energy corrections, while more open structures are preferred when temperature and entropy are accounted for. The molecular interactions holding the clusters as discrete units lead to large binding energies but are not strong enough to cause significant changes in the geometries of the interacting monomers. Our results indicate that bonding in the water heptamers can be considered as largely non-shared interactions with contributions from intermediate character of increasing covalency. © 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

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