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1.
J Mol Model ; 29(8): 223, 2023 Jul 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37402028

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Natural products and their biotransformation procedures are a powerful source of new chromophores with potential applications in fields like biology, pharmacology and materials science. Thus, this work discusses about the extraction procedure of 1-nitro-2-phenylethane (1N2PE) from Aniba canelilla, its biotransformation setup into 2-phenylethanol (2PE) using four fungi, Lasiodiplodia caatinguensis (phytopathogenic fungus from Citrus sinensis), Colletotrichum sp. (phytopathogenic fungus from Euterpe oleracea), Aspergillus flavus and Rigidoporus lineatus isolated from copper mining waste located in the interior of the Brazilian Amazon. A detailed experimental and theoretical vibrational analysis (IR and Raman) have allowed us to perform some charge transfer effects on the title compounds (push-pull effect) by monitoring specific vibrational modes of their electrophilic and nucleophilic molecular sites. The solvent interactions promote molecular conformations that affect the vibrational spectra of the donor and acceptor groups, as can be seen comparatively in the gas and aqueous solution spectra, an effect possibly related to the bathochromic shift in the calculated optical spectrum of the compounds. The nonlinear optical behavior shows that while the solvent reduces the response of 1N2PE, the response of 2PE increases the optical parameters, which presents low refractive index (n) and first hyperpolarizability. ([Formula: see text]) is almost eight times that reported for urea (42.79 a.u.), a common nonlinear optical material. Furthermore, the bioconversion goes from an electrophilic to a nucleophilic compound, affecting its molecular reactivity. METHODS: 1N2PE was obtained from Aniba canelilla, whose essential oil is constituted of [Formula: see text] of 2PE. The A. canelilla essential oil was extracted under hydrodistillation. The biotransformation reactions were performed in autoclaved liquid media (100 mL) composed of malt extract (2%) in 250 mL Erlenmeyer flask. Each culture was incubated in an orbital shaker (130 rpm) at [Formula: see text]C during 7 days and after that, 50 mg of 1N2PE (80%) were diluted in 100 [Formula: see text]L of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and added to the reactions flasks. Aliquots (2 mL) were removed using ethyl acetate (2 mL) and analyzed by GC-MS (fused silica capillary col1umn, Rtx -5MS 30 m [Formula: see text] 0.25 mm [Formula: see text] 0.25 [Formula: see text]m) in order to determine the amount of 1N2PE biotransformation. FTIR 1N2PE and 2PE spectra were obtained by attenuated total reflectance (ATR), using a Agilent CARY 630 spectrometer, in the spectral region 4000-650 cm[Formula: see text]. The quantum chemical calculations were carried out in the Gaussian 09 program while the DICE code was used to perform the classical Monte Carlo simulations and generate the liquid environment using the classical All-Atom Optimized parameters for Liquid Simulations (AA-OPLS). All nonlinear optical properties, reactive parameters, and electronic excitations were calculated using the Density Functional Theory framework coupled to the standard 6-311++G(d,p) basis set.


Subject(s)
Oils, Volatile , Phenylethyl Alcohol , Thermodynamics , Solvents , Fungi , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Quantum Theory
2.
Chemphyschem ; 24(12): e202300060, 2023 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36929611

ABSTRACT

The solute polarization due to solvent is a an electrostatic quantum effect that impacts diverse molecular properties, including the nonlinear optical response of a material. An iterative procedure that allows updating the solute charge distribution in the presence of the solvent is combined with a sequential Monte Carlo/Quantum Mechanics methodology and Density Functional Theory methods to evaluate the nonlinear optical (NLO) response using the hyper Rayleigh scattering (HRS) of a series of chromones recently identified in Chamaecrista diphylla, an herbaceous plant abundant throughout the Americas and used in folk medicine. From this study, it is determined that from gas to solvent environment, the systems acquire low refractive index (n) and an improvement of the first hyperpolarizability (ßHRS ), signaling potential NLO uses. It is shown that the octupolar contributions (ßJ=3 ) superate the dipolar ones (ßJ=1 ) and dominate the second-order optical response in both gas and liquid phases, which indicate nontrivial optical materials. Moreover, the solvent environment and structural changes in the periphery can tune significantly the dipolar/octupolar balance, showing a key to control the decoupling between these contributions.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(3): 619-626, 2023 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36648308

ABSTRACT

Within the framework of Density Functional Theory (DFT), the relevance of the term Hartree-Fock exchange (HFE) for a variety of molecular properties is a critical point. For this reason, we spend efforts to understand these relationships in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) parameters in a water solvent. This work takes advantage of the appropriate aug-cc-pVTZ-J basis set and the Minnesota family of DFT methods, which consider different portions of HFE contributions. With regard to solvent participation, the results are based on a sequential Monte Carlo/Quantum Mechanics procedure, which builds the structures of the liquid under realistic thermodynamic conditions. Compared to the accurate results of second-order polarization propagator approximation (SOPPA) and experimental data, all NMR parameters show a huge dependence on the size of the HFE contribution. For instance, the inclusion of this term in 1JOH and 2JHH indirect spin-spin couplings does vary with 49.661 and 25.459 Hz, respectively. The M06-HF method accounts for 100% of HFE and better matches the σO and σH shielding constants. On the other hand, 1JOH and 2JHH demand a medium contribution (54% of HFE), the best description being associated with the M06-2X method. Thus, the dependence varies regarding the phenomenology of the property in focus and the order for independent treatments. For elements that participate in hydrogen bonds simultaneously as donor and acceptor actors, the results indicate that explicit solvent molecules must be considered in the quantum mechanical calculations for better modeling of paramagnetic shielding constants.

4.
J Mol Model ; 28(4): 85, 2022 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35377023

ABSTRACT

An experimental and theoretical study based on DFT/TD-DFT approximations is presented to understand the nature of electronic excitations, reactivity, and nonlinear optical (NLO) properties of reactive orange 16 dye (RO16), an azo chromophore widely used in textile and pharmacological industries. The results show that the solvent has a considerable influence on the electronic properties of the material. According to experimental results, the absorption spectrum is formed by four intense transitions, which have been identified as [Formula: see text] states using TD-DFT calculations. However, the TD-DFT results reveal a weak [Formula: see text] in the low-lying spectral region. Continuum models of solvation indicate that these states suffer from bathochromic (ca. 15 nm) and hypsochromic shifts (ca. 4 nm), respectively. However, the expected blue shift for the absorption [Formula: see text] is only described using long-range or dispersion-corrected DFT methods. RO16 is classified as a strong electrophilic system, with electrophilicity ω > 1.5 eV. Concerning the nucleophilicity parameter (N), from vacuum to solvent, the environment is active and changes the nucleophilic status from strong to moderate nucleophile (2.0 ≤ N ≤ 3.0 eV). The results also suggest that all electrical constants are strongly dependent on long-range and Hartree-Fock exchange contributions, and the absence of these interactions gives results far from reality. In particular, the results for the NLO response show that the chromophore presents a potential application in this field with a low refractive index and first hyperpolarizability ca. 214 times bigger than the value usually reported for urea (ß = 0.34 × 10- 30 esu), which is a standard NLO material. Concerning the solvent effects, the results indicate that the polarizability increases [Formula: see text] esu from gas to solvent while the first hyperpolarizability is calculated as [Formula: see text] esu, ca. 180%, regarding the vacuum. The results suggest RO16 is a potential compound in NLO applications. Graphical Abstract The frontier molecular orbitals, and the inverse relation between the energy-gap (Egap) and the first hyperpolarizability (ß).

5.
Biophys Rev ; 9(5): 729-745, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28940105

ABSTRACT

Emodin is one of the most abundant anthraquinone derivatives found in nature. It is the active principle of some traditional herbal medicines with known biological activities. In this work, we combined experimental and theoretical studies to reveal information about location, orientation, interaction and perturbing effects of Emodin on lipid bilayers, where we have taken into account the neutral form of the Emodin (EMH) and its anionic/deprotonated form (EM-). Using both UV/Visible spectrophotometric techniques and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we showed that both EMH and EM- are located in a lipid membrane. Additionally, using MD simulations, we revealed that both forms of Emodin are very close to glycerol groups of the lipid molecules, with the EMH inserted more deeply into the bilayer and more disoriented relative to the normal of the membrane when compared with the EM-, which is more exposed to interfacial water. Analysis of several structural properties of acyl chains of the lipids in a hydrated pure DMPC bilayer and in the presence of Emodin revealed that both EMH and EM- affect the lipid bilayer, resulting in a remarkable disorder of the bilayer in the vicinity of the Emodin. However, the disorder caused by EMH is weaker than that caused by EM-. Our results suggest that these disorders caused by Emodin might lead to distinct effects on lipid bilayers including its disruption which are reported in the literature.

6.
An. acad. bras. ciênc ; 82(3): 791-797, Sept. 2010. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-556813

ABSTRACT

The Eucalyptus grandis logs temperatures were determined and correlated with the board's cracks during steaming. Thermocouples were inserted in the logs center, registering their temperatures during steaming at 90"C. The logs were sawed and the board's cracks measured. It was concluded that: (1) the logistic S-shaped curve explains the logs temperature variation; (2) the logs with diameter of 20 to <25, 25 to <30 and 30 to <35 cm presented, respectively, 84.2"C, 73.1"C and 45.8"C in the steaming; and (3) the cracks lengths significantly decreased in logs that reached the glass transition temperature.


As temperaturas em toras de Eucalyptus grandis, durante a vaporização, foram determinadas e correlacionadas com as rachaduras das tábuas. Nos centros das toras foram inseridos termopares e registradas suas temperaturas durante a vaporização à 90"C. As toras foram desdobradas e as rachaduras das tábuas mensuradas. Concluiu-se que: (1) o modelo estatístico sigmoidal logístico explica a variação da temperatura nas toras; (2) as toras com 20 a <25, 25 a <30 e 30 a <35 cm de diâmetro apresentaram, respectivamente, 84,2"C, 73,1"C e 45,8"C ao final da vaporização; e (3) as rachaduras foramsignificativamente menores nas toras que atingiram a temperatura de transição vítrea.


Subject(s)
Eucalyptus , Transition Temperature , Wood , Glass , Models, Theoretical , Volatilization
7.
An Acad Bras Cienc ; 82(3): 791-7, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21562706

ABSTRACT

The Eucalyptus grandis logs temperatures were determined and correlated with the board's cracks during steaming. Thermocouples were inserted in the logs center, registering their temperatures during steaming at 90°C. The logs were sawed and the board's cracks measured. It was concluded that: (1) the logistic S-shaped curve explains the logs temperature variation; (2) the logs with diameter of 20 to <25, 25 to <30 and 30 to <35 cm presented, respectively, 84.2°C, 73.1°C and 45.8°C in the steaming; and (3) the cracks lengths significantly decreased in logs that reached the glass transition temperature.


Subject(s)
Eucalyptus , Transition Temperature , Wood , Glass , Models, Theoretical , Volatilization
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