https://www.selleckchem.com/products/santacruzamate-a-cay10683.html Binding of Nile Blue (NB) with calf thymus DNA has been studied using molecular modeling, spectroscopic, and thermodynamic techniques. Our study revealed that NB binds to the DNA helix by two types of modes (groove binding and intercalation) simultaneously. The thermodynamic study showed that the overall binding free energy is a combination of several negative and positive free energy changes. The binding was favored by negative enthalpy and positive entropy changes (due to the release of water from the DNA helix). The docking study validated all experimental evidence and showed that NB binds to a DNA minor groove at low concentrations and switches to intercalation mode at higher concentrations.In this work, we report the facile, environmentally friendly, room-temperature (RT) synthesis of porous CuO nanosheets and their application as a photocatalyst to degrade an organic pollutant/food dye using NaBH4 as the reducing agent in an aqueous medium. Ultrahigh-resolution field effect scanning electron microscopy images of CuO displayed a broken nanosheet-like (a length of ∼160 nm, a width of ∼65 nm) morphology, and the lattice strain was estimated to be ∼1.24 × 10-3 using the Williamson-Hall analysis of X-ray diffraction plots. Owing to the strong quantum size confinement effect, CuO nanosheets resulted in an optical energy band gap of ∼1.92 eV, measured using Tauc plots of the ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) spectrum, resulting in excellent photocatalytic efficiency. The RT synthesized CuO catalyst showed a high Brunauer-Emmet-Teller surface area of 30.88 ± 0.2313 m2/g (a correlation coefficient of 0.99972) with an average Barrett-Joyner-Halenda pore size of ∼20.385 nm. The obtained porous CuO nanosheets exhibited a high crystallinity of 73.5% with a crystallite size of ∼12 nm and was applied as an efficient photocatalyst for degradation of the organic pollutant/food dye, Allura Red AC (AR) dye, as monito