Ditlevsen Gunn (camelbanjo5)

Following one month treatment with 9Q, the amyloid burden and the cognitive deficits in 3xTg-AD mice were significantly ameliorated. It was observed that 9Q treatment mitigated synapse dysfunction, decreased amyloidogenic APP processing, and reduced the tau pathology in 3xTg-AD mice. Taken together, our results suggested that dual inhibition of cholinesterases and Aβ aggregation could be a promising approach in AD treatment.We report on an approach to bring together single crystal metal catalyst preparation and graphene growth in a combined process flow using a standard cold-wall chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor. We employ a sandwich arrangement between a commercial polycrystalline Cu foil and c-plane sapphire wafer and show that close-spaced vacuum sublimation across the confined gap can result in an epitaxial, single-crystal Cu(111) film at high growth rate. The arrangement is scalable (we demonstrate 2″ wafer scale) and suppresses reactor contamination with Cu. While starting with an impure Cu foil, the freshly prepared Cu film is of high purity as measured by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. We seamlessly connect the initial metallization with subsequent graphene growth via the introduction of hydrogen and gaseous carbon precursors, thereby eliminating contamination due to substrate transfer and common lengthy catalyst pretreatments. We show that the sandwich approach also enables for a Cu surface with nanometer scale roughness during graphene growth and thus results in high quality graphene similar to previously demonstrated Cu enclosure approaches. We systematically explore the parameter space and discuss the opportunities, including subsequent dry transfer, generality, and versatility of our approach particularly regarding the cost-efficient preparation of different single crystal film orientations and expansion to other material systems.Biotissue adhesives and antibacterial materials have great potential applications in wound dressing, implantable devices, and bioelectronics. In this study, stretchable tissue adhesive hydrogels with intrinsic antibacterial properties have been demonstrated by copolymerizing zwitterionic monomers with ionic monomers. The hydrogels are stretchable to about 900% strain and show a modulus of 4-9 kPa. The zwitterionic moieties provide strong dipole-dipole interaction, electrostatic interaction, and hydrogen bonding with the skin surface, and thus show adhesion strength values of 1-4 kPa to skin. Meanwhile, the copolymerized cationic or anionic monomers break the intrinsic electrostatic stoichiometry of the zwitterionic units and thus mediate the electrostatic interactions and the adhesion strength with the surface. The stretchable hydrogels form a robust and compliant (due to low modulus and stretchability) adhesive to skin, rubber, glass, and plastics, and could be repeatedly peeled-off and readhered to the skin. Moreover, the abundant quaternary ammonium (QA) groups in the zwitterionic moieties and the added QA groups endow it outstanding antibacterial properties (>99%). These stretchable tissue adhesive antibacterial hydrogels are promising for wound dressings and implantable devices.The function and activity of many proteins is finely controlled by the modulation of the entropic contribution of intrinsically disordered domains that are not directly involved in any recognition event. Inspired by this mechanism, we demonstrate here that we could finely regulate the catalytic activity of a model DNAzyme (i.e., a synthetic DNA sequence with enzyme-like properties) by rationally introducing intrinsically disordered nucleic acid portions in its original sequence. More specifically, we have re-engineered here the well-characterized Cu2+-dependent DNAzyme that catalyzes a self-cleavage reaction by introducing a poly(T) linker domain in its sequence. The linker is not directly involved in the recognition event and connects the two domains that fold to form the catalyti