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Controlling Transition Metal-Catalyzed Alkyne Annulations Utilizing Polarized Ynol Ethers, Brandon L. Coles-Taylor Jan 2020

Controlling Transition Metal-Catalyzed Alkyne Annulations Utilizing Polarized Ynol Ethers, Brandon L. Coles-Taylor

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Transition metal-catalyzed alkyne annulations have developed into incredibly powerful synthetic tools over there the past quarter century. These reactions provide rapid access to important organic scaffolds such as indole, quinoline, isoquinoline, indene, and isocoumarin scaffolds. Transition metal mediated alkyne annulations have proven invaluable in synthetic fields, such as natural product total synthesis, by offering efficient pathways to otherwise synthetically difficult to access substrates.

Foundational works performed by chemist such as Larock, Ackermann, Satoh, and Miura have been established through relying upon the usage of symmetrical alkynes. When unsymmetrical alkynes are used in annulation processes mixtures of regioisomers are often isolated. …


Development Towards An Ethylene Sensing Artificial Metalloenzyme, Mitchell Lee Ellinwood Jan 2020

Development Towards An Ethylene Sensing Artificial Metalloenzyme, Mitchell Lee Ellinwood

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Ethylene (ethene) is the essential ripening hormone for climacteric plants, and consequently its detection and quantification is of considerable interest to the horticulture industry. Its detection however is a non-trivial pursuit, traditionally requiring expensive and inaccessible instrumentation that fail to provide in vivo information about ethylene. A ruthenium based fluorescent probe for the selective detection of ethylene has recently been developed, and it was envisioned that this probe could be made biocompatible by encasing it within a protein scaffold making it an artificial metalloenzyme. To this end biotinylated N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) were synthesized, which can be appended onto the ruthenium …


Characterization Of The Dimerization And Salt Dependent Aggregation Of The Als-Linked Protein Tdp-43, Elizabeth Ehrhardt Jan 2020

Characterization Of The Dimerization And Salt Dependent Aggregation Of The Als-Linked Protein Tdp-43, Elizabeth Ehrhardt

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Trans-active response (TAR) DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) is essential for RNA processing but can also form toxic cytoplasmic inclusions in neurons of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). RNA-binding has been shown to have the potential to decrease or inhibit the aggregation of TDP-43, indicating that supplying RNA therapeutics may be a solution to treat these neurodegenerative disorders. However, the mechanism of aggregation, transitioning from TDP-43’s native dimeric state to small oligomers to toxic aggregates, is still relatively unknown. This needs to be established before determining how to target and disrupt this aggregation. Using GFP-TDP-43, …


Sensitivity Of Radical Sam Enzyme Mftc To Molecular Oxygen, Vishnu Govindarajan Jan 2020

Sensitivity Of Radical Sam Enzyme Mftc To Molecular Oxygen, Vishnu Govindarajan

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

MftC is a radical S-adenosyl L-methionine (SAM) enzyme that catalyzes the first step in the production of mycofactocin. It is a ribosomally synthesized post-translationally modified (RiPP) redox cofactor shown to be essential for the survival of bacteria in the Mycobacterium genus in the presence of cholesterol as a carbon source and for the sequestration of ethanol. MftC catalyzes the C – terminal decarboxylation of tyrosine and the subsequent cross-linking of tyrosine to the penultimate valine on the precursor peptide MftA. The product formed out of the reaction is processed into mycofactocin in downstream processes. The bacteria in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis …


Instrument And Application Development In Saturation Recovery And Rapid Scan Electron Paramagnetic Resonance, Joseph E. Mcpeak Jan 2020

Instrument And Application Development In Saturation Recovery And Rapid Scan Electron Paramagnetic Resonance, Joseph E. Mcpeak

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Enhanced signal sensitivity by the use of Rapid Scan (RS) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), a technique that allows for much faster magnetic field scans than traditional field-swept techniques, has facilitated improved data acquisition for many types of samples. For example, irradiated fingernails for radiation dosimetry have been studied using RS-EPR, which resulted in substantial decreases in detection limits. Samarium-mediated reduction mechanisms in organic synthesis have been investigated by RS-EPR providing evidence for a radical intermediate. Spectra of organic radicals exhibiting both narrow lines and closely spaced hyperfine interactions have been recorded via RS-EPR. Well-resolved spectra can be recorded at a …


Iron In Urban Air Pollution, Joseph R. Salazar Jan 2020

Iron In Urban Air Pollution, Joseph R. Salazar

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The processes by which iron is solubilized are largely unknown. There are three hypotheses on how iron is soluble: 1) iron is thought to undergo an acid based solubilization process, 2) iron undergoes an oxidation/reduction process and reduces iron(III) to the more soluble iron(II), and 3) iron is bound to organic molecules, which solubilizes it. The 3 hypotheses on iron water-solubilized are explored by presenting two individual studies.

The first study investigates iron directly from car exhaust. Exhaust particles were collected from 32 vehicles. Iron solubility in these samples ranged from 0%-82% with the average iron solubility being 30%. X-ray …