ChemInform Abstract: COPPER(II) CATALYZED HYDROLYSIS OF THIAMIN PYROPHOSPHATE: STRUCTURE-REACTIVITY RELATIONSHIP

1985 ◽  
Vol 16 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. T. KHAN ◽  
P. N. RAO
Synthesis ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (13) ◽  
pp. 2928-2932
Author(s):  
Claude Legault ◽  
Robin Dagenais ◽  
Antoine Lauriers

The iodine(III)-mediated oxidative transposition of vinyl halides to the corresponding α-halo ketones has been recently reported. The method is high yielding and offers good substrate scope. The investigation of other iodine(III) reagents to promote this reaction is described. The newly developed protocol reduces the number of waste products formed in the synthetic transformation. A structure–reactivity relationship study of numerous [hydroxy(tosyloxy)iodo]arenes toward haloalkenes is reported. The results highlight the challenge of obtaining a chemoselective reaction using these reagents.


Author(s):  
R. J. Barrnett ◽  
J. A. Higgins

The main products of intestinal hydrolysis of dietary triglycerides are free fatty acids and monoglycerides. These form micelles from which the lipids are absorbed across the mucosal cell brush border. Biochemical studies have indicated that intestinal mucosal cells possess a triglyceride synthesising system, which uses monoglyceride directly as an acylacceptor as well as the system found in other tissues in which alphaglycerophosphate is the acylacceptor. The former pathway is used preferentially for the resynthesis of triglyceride from absorbed lipid, while the latter is used mainly for phospholipid synthesis. Both lipids are incorporated into chylomicrons. Morphological studies have shown that during fat absorption there is an initial appearance of fat droplets within the cisternae of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and that these subsequently accumulate in the golgi elements from which they are released at the lateral borders of the cell as chylomicrons.We have recently developed several methods for the fine structural localization of acyltransferases dependent on the precipitation, in an electron dense form, of CoA released during the transfer of the acyl group to an acceptor, and have now applied these methods to a study of the fine structural localization of the enzymes involved in chylomicron lipid biosynthesis. These methods are based on the reduction of ferricyanide ions by the free SH group of CoA.


Author(s):  
T. Baird ◽  
J.R. Fryer ◽  
S.T. Galbraith

Introduction Previously we had suggested (l) that the striations observed in the pod shaped crystals of β FeOOH were an artefact of imaging in the electron microscope. Contrary to this adsorption measurements on bulk material had indicated the presence of some porosity and Gallagher (2) had proposed a model structure - based on the hollandite structure - showing the hollandite rods forming the sides of 30Å pores running the length of the crystal. Low resolution electron microscopy by Watson (3) on sectioned crystals embedded in methylmethacrylate had tended to support the existence of such pores.We have applied modern high resolution techniques to the bulk crystals and thin sections of them without confirming these earlier postulatesExperimental β FeOOH was prepared by room temperature hydrolysis of 0.01M solutions of FeCl3.6H2O, The precipitate was washed, dried in air, and embedded in Scandiplast resin. The sections were out on an LKB III Ultramicrotome to a thickness of about 500Å.


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