Facile access to such analogues serves to expand the repertoire of available enzymatically cleavable linkers for ADC generation. This methodology empowers a robust and facile library generation and future exploration into linker analogues containing unnatural amino acids as a selectivity tuning tool.The self-assembly of plasmonic nanoparticles into highly ordered superlattices could pave the way toward novel nanomaterials for surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). Here, we propose the formation of large-area superlattices of elongated rhombic dodecahedra in a vertical orientation via a controlled droplet evaporation process. Expectedly, the constant humidity of the experimental condition could control the evaporation speed of droplets and this procedure promotes the balance between driven depletion attraction and electrostatic repulsion in the system, leading to the generation of well-organized three-dimensional (3D) superlattices. The unique geometry of elongated rhombic dodecahedra could establish the tetragonal superlattices, which breaks the conventional hexagonal symmetry of gold nanorods. Specifically, the influence of the type and concentration of surfactants, the concentration of nanoparticles, and the amount of droplets on the preparation results were systematically investigated to find the optimal assembly parameters. Remarkably, such close-packed tetragonal arrays of vertically aligned elongated rhombic dodecahedra exhibit more excellent SERS performance compared with the traditional hexagonal superstructure of gold nanorods. Benefiting from the high sensitivity and reproducibility of elongated rhombic dodecahedron superlattices, their applications in the determination of pesticide residues in apple and grape peels were successfully demonstrated. As a result, this study may advance the production of innovative plasmonic nanomaterials for a broad range of fields.We describe cross-reactive human antibodies recognizing influenza B viruses spanning nearly 80 years of antigenic drift. Structures show that they engage the receptor-binding site (RBS) of the viral hemagglutinin with strong similarities to their influenza A counterparts, despite structural differences between the RBS of influenza A and B. Our data show that these antibodies readily cross-react with both influenza B Victoria and Yamagata lineages. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/wnt-c59-c59.html We also note that all antibodies are encoded by IGHV3-9/IGK1-33. Future research will provide insight into the prevalence of these antibodies in the human population.Pain management devoid of serious opioid adverse effects is still far from reach despite vigorous research and development efforts. Alternatives to classical opioids have been sought for years, and mounting reports of individuals finding pain relief with kratom have recently intensified research on this natural product. Although the composition of kratom is complex, the pharmacological characterization of its most abundant alkaloids has drawn attention to three molecules in particular, owing to their demonstrated antinociceptive activity and limited side effects in vivo. These three molecules are mitragynine (MG), its oxidized active metabolite, 7-hydroxymitragynine (7OH), and the indole-to-spiropseudoindoxy rearrangement product of MG known as mitragynine pseudoindoxyl (MP). Although these three alkaloids have been shown to preferentially activate the G protein signaling pathway by binding and allosterically modulating the μ-opioid receptor (MOP), a molecular level understanding of this process is lacking and yet important for the design of improved therapeutics. The molecular dynamics study and experimental validation reported here provide an atomic level description of how MG, 7OH, and MP bind and allosterically modulate the MOP, which can eventually guide structure-based drug design of improved therapeutics.Searching for membrane-active synthetic analogues that are structurally simple yet functionally comparable to natural channel proteins has been of central research interest in the past four decades, yet custom design of the ion transport selectivity still remains a grand challenge. Here we report on a suite of buckyball-based molecular balls (MBs), enabling transmembrane ion transport selectivity to be custom designable. The modularly tunable MBm-Cn (m = 4-7; n = 6-12) structures consist of a C60-fullerene core, flexible alkyl linkers Cn (i.e., C6 for n-C6H12 group), and peripherally aligned benzo-3m-crown-m ethers (i.e., m = 4 for benzo-12-crown-4) as ion-transporting units. Screening a matrix of 16 such MBs, combinatorially derived from four different crown units and four different Cn linkers, intriguingly revealed that their transport selectivity well resembles the intrinsic ion binding affinity of the respective benzo-crown units present, making custom design of the transport selectivity possible. Specifically, MB4s, containing benzo-12-crown-4 units, all are Li+-selective in transmembrane ion transport, with the most active MB4-C10 exhibiting an EC50(Li+) value of 0.13 μM (corresponding to 0.13 mol % of the lipid present) while excluding all other monovalent alkali-metal ions. Likewise, the most Na+ selective MB5-C8 and K+ selective MB6-C8 demonstrate high Na+/K+ and K+/Na+ selectivity values of 13.7 and 7.8, respectively. For selectivity to Rb+ and Cs+ ions, the most active MB7-C8 displays exceptionally high transport efficiencies, with an EC50(Rb+) value of 105 nM (0.11 mol %) and an EC50(Cs+) value of 77 nM (0.079 mol %).Injectable hydrogels with the capability to cast a hypoxic microenvironment is of great potentialities to develop novel therapies for tissue regeneration. However, the relative research still remains at the conceptual phase. Herein, we chose diabetic wound as a representative injury model to explore the actual therapeutic results of tissue injury by injectable hypoxia-induced hydrogels. To enhance recovery and widen applicability, the hypoxia-induced system was incorporated with a conductive network by an original sequentially interpenetrating technique based on the combination of a fast "click chemistry" and a slow enzymatic mediated cross-linking. Hyperbranched poly(β-amino ester)-tetraaniline (PBAE-TA) was cross-linked with thiolated hyaluronic acid (HA-SH) via a thiol-ene click reaction, contributing to the rapid formation of the first conductive network, where vanillin-grafted gelatin (Geln-Van) and laccase (Lac) with a slow cross-linking rate were employed in casting a hypoxic microenvironment. The as-prepared injectable hydrogels possessed both suitable conductivity and sustainable hypoxia-inducing capability to upregulate the hypoxia-inducible factor-1α and connexin 43 expressions of the encapsulated adipose-derived stem cells, which enhanced vascular regeneration and immunoregulation and further promoted the reconstruction of blood vessels, hair follicles, and dermal collagen matrix, eventually leading to the recovery of diabetic rat skin wounds and restoration of skin functions.