Polymeric tissue adhesives provide versatile materials for wound management and are widely used in a variety of medical settings ranging from minor to life-threatening tissue injuries. Compared to the traditional methods of wound closure (i.e., suturing and stapling), they are relatively easy to use, enable rapid application, and introduce minimal tissue damage. Furthermore, they can act as hemostats to control bleeding and provide a tissue-healing environment at the wound site. Despite their numerous current applications, tissue adhesives still face several limitations and unresolved challenges (e.g., weak adhesion strength and poor mechanical properties) that limit their use, leaving ample room for future improvements. Successful development of next-generation adhesives will likely require a holistic understanding of the chemical and physical properties of the tissue-adhesive interface, fundamental mechanisms of tissue adhesion, and requirements for specific clinical applications. In this review, we discuss a set of rational guidelines for design of adhesives, recent progress in the field along with examples of commercially available adhesives and those under development, tissue-specific considerations, and finally potential functions for future adhesives. Advances in tissue adhesives will open new avenues for wound care and potentially provide potent therapeutics for various medical applications.Although benzyne has been well-known to serve as a synthon that can conveniently prepare various 1,2-difunctionalized benzenes, the sites other than its formal triple bond remain silent in typical benzyne transformations. An unprecedented aryne 1,2,3,5-tetrasubstitution was realized from 3-silylbenzyne and aryl allyl sulfoxide, the mechanistic pathway of which includes a regioselective aryne insertion into the S═O bond, a [3,6]-sigmatropic rearrangement, and a thermal aromatic 1,3-silyl migration cascade.The safety of marketed drugs is an ongoing concern, with some of the more frequently prescribed medicines resulting in serious or life-threatening adverse effects in some patients. Safety-related information for approved drugs has been curated to include the assignment of toxicity class(es) based on their withdrawn status and/or black box warning information described on medicinal product labels. The ChEMBL resource contains a wide range of bioactivity data types, from early "Discovery" stage preclinical data for individual compounds through to postclinical data on marketed drugs; the inclusion of the curated drug safety data set within this framework can support a wide range of safety-related drug discovery questions. The curated drug safety data set will be made freely available through ChEMBL and updated in future database releases.A Et3N-triggered regioselective [3 + 2] cycloaddition reaction of 3-alkynoates with Seyferth-Gilbert reagent has been developed to furnish a series of trisubstituted pyrazole-3-phosphonates. A one-pot cycloaddition/alkylation sequence further offered access to the corresponding fully substituted pyrazoles.The reaction of (LSi)2 (1; L = PhC(NtBu)2) with 2 equiv of Me3SiC2C2SiMe3 resulted in the formation of (Me3SiC2)2(Me3Si)2C4Si2(L)2 (2). 2 exhibited a one-electron transfer when treated with 1 equiv of [Ph3C]+[B(C6F5)4]- to yield [(Me3SiC2)2(Me3Si)2C4Si2(L)2]·+[B(C6F5)4]- (3) and Ph3CCPh3, respectively. When compound 2 was treated with 2 equiv of AgOSO2CF3 a transfer of two electrons occurred to produce [(Me3SiC2)2(Me3Si)2C4Si2(L)2]2+·2[OSO2CF3]- (4) and elemental silver. The 1,4-disilabenzene 2 is disclosed of an open-shell singlet diradical character, and 3 and 4 are, respectively, the elusive stable radical cation and dication species of the 1,4-disilabenzene (2). Furthermore, 2 reacted with group 16 elements of O, S, and Se by oxidative addition to form (Me3SiC2)2(Me3Si)2C4Si2(L)2(μ-O2) (5) and (Me3SiC2)2(Me3Si)2C4Si2(L)2(μ-E) (E = S (6) and Se (7)), respectively.Uranium-238 (238U), a long-lived radiometal, is widespread in the environment because of both naturally occurring processes and anthropogenic processes. The ingestion or inhalation of large amounts of U is a major threat to humans, and its toxicity is considered mostly chemical rather than radiological. Therefore, a way to remove uranium ingested by humans from uranium-contaminated water or from the air is critically needed. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/gsk-2837808A.html This study investigated the uranium uptake by hydroxyapatite (HAP), a compound found in human bone and teeth. The uptake of U by teeth is a result of U transport as dissolved uranyl (UO22+) in contaminated water, and U adsorption has been linked to delays in both tooth eruption and development. In this present work, the influence of pH, contact time, initial U concentration, and buffer solution on the uptake and removal of U in synthetic HAP was investigated and modeled. The influence of pH (pH of human saliva, 6.7-7.4) on the uptake of uranyl was negligible. Furthermore, the kinetics were extremely fast; in one second of exposure, 98% of uranyl was uptaken by HAP. The uptake followed pseudo-second-order kinetics and a Freundlich isotherm model. A 0.2 M sodium carbonate solution removed all the uranyl from HAP after 1 h. Another series of in vitro tests were performed with real teeth as targets. We found that, for a 50 mg/L U in PBS solution adjusted to physiological pH, ∼35% of the uranyl was uptaken by the tooth after 1 h, following pseudo-first-order kinetics. Among several washing solutions tested, a commercially available carbonate, as well as a commercially available fluoride solution, enabled removal of all the uranyl taken up by the teeth.The utility of two-dimensional generalized correlation spectroscopy (2D-COS) for tracking complex solid-state reactions is demonstrated using infrared spectra acquired during a photochemically induced decomposition reaction. Eleven different thin films, consisting of six monometallic and five bimetallic 2-ethylhexanoate complexes, were tracked as a function of photolysis time. Overlapping peaks in the infrared fingerprint region are readily discriminated using 2D-COS, enabling individual vibrational components to be used to distinguish whether carboxylate ligands are free/ionic or bound in a chelating, bridging, or monodentate fashion. This classification enables the decomposition mechanism to be tracked for all 11 samples, revealing that ligands bound in monodentate and bridging fashions are first converted to chelates before being lost as volatile products for all samples. The magnitude of the measured first-order rate constants for loss of chelated ligands is found to correlate linearly to the asymmetric stretching frequency of monodentate ligands but exhibits a V shape when plotted against the electronegativity of the metal center.