Uranium atoms activate methane upon ultraviolet excitation to form the methyl uranium hydride CH3-UH, which undergoes alpha-H transfer to produce uranium methylidene dihydride, CH2=UH2. This rearrangement most likely occurs on an excited-quintet potential-energy surface and is followed by relaxation in the argon matrix. These simple U+CH4 reaction products are identified through isotopic substitution (13CH4, CD4, CH2D2) and density functional theory frequency and structure calculations for the strong U-H stretching modes. Relativistic multiconfiguration (CASSCF/CASPT2) calculations substantiate the agostic distorted C1 ground-state structure for the triplet CH2=UH2 molecule. We find that uranium atoms are less reactive in methane activation than thorium atoms. Our calculations show that the CH2=UH2 complex is distorted more than CH2=ThH2. A favorable interaction between the low energy open-shell U(5f) sigma orbital and the agostic hydrogen contributes to the distortion in the uranium methylidene complexes.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology is characterized by plaques of amyloid beta (Aβ) and neurofibrillary tangles of tau. Aβ aggregation is thought to occur at early stages of the disease, and ultimately gives way to the formation of tau tangles which track with cognitive decline in humans. Here, we report the crystal structure of an Aβ core segment determined by MicroED and in it, note characteristics of both fibrillar and oligomeric structure. Using this structure, we designed peptide-based inhibitors that reduce Aβ aggregation and toxicity of already-aggregated species. Unexpectedly, we also found that these inhibitors reduce the efficiency of Aβ-mediated tau aggregation, and moreover reduce aggregation and self-seeding of tau fibrils. The ability of these inhibitors to interfere with both Aβ and tau seeds suggests these fibrils share a common epitope, and supports the hypothesis that cross-seeding is one mechanism by which amyloid is linked to tau aggregation and could promote cognitive decline.
The structures of aquo complexes of the curium(III) ion have been systematically studied using quantum chemical and molecular dynamics (MD) methods. The first hydration shell of the Cm 3+ ion has been calculated using density functional theory (DFT), with and without inclusion of the conductor-like polarizable continuum medium (CPCM) model of solvation. The calculated results indicate that the primary hydration number of Cm 3+ is nine, with a Cm−O bond distance of 2.47−2.48 Å. The calculated bond distances and the hydration number are in excellent agreement with available experimental data. The inclusion of a complete second hydration shell of Cm 3+ has been investigated using both DFT and MD methods. The presence of the second hydration shell has significant effects on the primary coordination sphere, suggesting that the explicit inclusion of second-shell effects is important for understanding the nature of the first shell. The calculated results indicate that 21 water molecules can be coordinated in the second hydration shell of the Cm 3+ ion. MD simulations within the hydrated-ion model suggest that the second-shell water molecules exchange with the bulk solvent with a lifetime of 161 ps.
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