Ag(2)O/TiO(2) heterostructure with high photocatalytic activity both in ultraviolet and visible-light region was synthesized via a simple and practical coprecipitation method by using surface-modified TiO(2) nanobelts as substrate materials. The as-prepared heterostructure composite included Ag(2)O nanoparticles assembled uniformly on the rough surface of TiO(2) nanobelts. Comparing with pure TiO(2) nanobelts and Ag(2)O nanoparticles, the composite photocatalyst with a wide weight ratio between TiO(2) and Ag(2)O exhibited enhanced photocatalytic activity under ultraviolet and visible light irradiation in the decomposition of methyl orange (MO) aqueous solution. On the basis of the characterization by X-ray diffraction, photoluminescence and UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopies, two mechanisms were proposed to account for the photocatalytic activity of Ag(2)O/TiO(2) nanobelts' heterostructure.
Three types of TiO‐compound‐based nanobelts (Na2Ti3O7, H2Ti3O7, TiO2) are prepared from commercial TiO2 powders via an alkaline hydrothermal process. Nanostructured sheets based on the as‐synthesized nanobelts are prepared using a paper‐making process. The nanobelts are connected with hydrogen bonds or/and bridge oxygen atoms and packed together, forming a paperlike porous network structure, with an average pore size of ∼500 nm. The electrical properties and gas sensing of the nanostructured sheets are demonstrated to display sensitivity down to sub‐ppb levels. H2Ti3O7 nanobelts decorated with Ag nanoparticles have also been applied as an antibacterial agent.
Natural products produced by microorganisms and plants are a major resource of antibacterial and anticancer drugs as well as industrially useful compounds. However, the native producers often suffer from low productivity and titers. Here we summarize the recent applications of heterologous biosynthesis for the production of several important classes of natural products such as terpenoids, flavonoids, alkaloids, and polyketides. In addition, we will discuss the new tools and strategies at multi-scale levels including gene, pathway, genome and community levels for highly efficient heterologous biosynthesis of natural products.
INTRODUCTION
Design and construction of an extensively modified yeast genome is a direct means to interrogate the integrity, comprehensiveness, and accuracy of the knowledge amassed by the yeast community to date. The international synthetic yeast genome project (Sc2.0) aims to build an entirely designer, synthetic Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome. The synthetic genome is designed to increase genome stability and genetic flexibility while maintaining cell fitness near that of the wild type. A major challenge for a genome synthesis lies in identifying and eliminating fitness-reducing sequence variants referred to as “bugs.”
RATIONALE
Debugging is imperative for successfully building a fit strain encoding a synthetic genome. However, it is time-consuming and laborious to replace wild-type genes and measure strain fitness systematically. The Sc2.0 PCRTag system, which specifies recoded sequences within open reading frames (ORFs), is designed to distinguish synthetic from wild-type DNA in a simple polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. This system provides an opportunity to efficiently map bugs to the related genes by using a pooling strategy and subsequently correct them. Further, as we identify bugs in designer sequences, we will identify gaps in our knowledge and gain a deeper understanding of genome biology, allowing refinement of future design strategies.
RESULTS
We chemically synthesized yeast chromosome X, synX, designed to be 707,459 base pairs. A high-throughput mapping strategy called pooled PCRTag mapping (PoPM) was developed to identify unexpected bugs during chromosome assembly. With this method, the genotypes of pools of colonies with normal or defective fitness are assessed by PCRTag analysis. The PoPM method exploits the patchwork structure of synthetic and wild-type sequences observed in the majority of putative synthetic DNA integrants or meiotic progeny derived from synthetic/wild-type strain backcross. PCRTag analysis with both synthetic and wild-type specific primers, carried out with genomic DNA extracted from the two pools of clones (normal fitness versus a specific growth defect), can be used to identify regions of synthetic DNA missing from the normal fitness pool and, analogously, sections of wild-type DNA absent from the specific growth-defect pool. In this way, the defect can be efficiently mapped to a very small overlapping region, and subsequent systematic analysis of designed changes in that region can be used to identify the bug. Several bugs were identified and corrected, including a growth defect mapping to a specific synonymously recoded PCRTag sequence in the essential FIP1 ORF and the effect of introducing a loxPsym site that unexpectedly altered the the promoter function of a nearby gene, ATP2. In addition, meiotic crossover was employed to repair the massive duplications and rearrangements in the synthetic chromosome. The debugged synX strain exhibited high fitness under a variety of conditions tested and in competitive growth with the wild-type strain.
CONCLUSION
Synthet...
TiO(2) nanobelts were prepared by a hydrothermal process, and the structures were manipulated by surface engineering, including surface coarsening by an acid-corrosion procedure and formation of Ag-TiO(2) heterostuctures on TiO(2) nanobelts surface by photoreduction. Their performance in the detection of ethanol vapor was then examined and compared by electrical conductivity measurements at varied temperatures. Of the sensors based on the four nanobelt samples (TiO(2) nanobelts, Ag-TiO(2) nanobelts, surface-coarsened TiO(2) nanobelts, and surface-coarsened Ag-TiO(2) nanobelts), they all displayed improved sensitivity, selectivity, and short response times for ethanol vapor detection, in comparison with sensors based on other oxide nanostructures. Importantly, the formation of Ag-TiO(2) heterostuctures on TiO(2) nanobelts surface and surface coarsening of TiO(2) nanobelts were found to lead to apparent further enhancement of the sensors sensitivity, as well as a decrease of the optimal working temperature. That is, within the present experimental context, the vapor sensor based on surface-coarsened Ag-TiO(2) composite nanobelts exhibited the best performance. The sensing mechanism was interpreted on the basis of the surface depletion model, and the improvement by oxide surface engineering was accounted for by the chemical sensitization mechanism. This work provided a practical approach to the enhancement of gas sensing performance by one-dimensional oxide nanomaterials.
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