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Dive into the research topics where Alberto Moscatelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Alberto Moscatelli.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

New melanic pigments in the human brain that accumulate in aging and block environmental toxic metals

Luigi Zecca; Chiara Bellei; Patrizia Costi; Alberto Albertini; Enrico Monzani; Luigi Casella; M. Gallorini; Luigi Bergamaschi; Alberto Moscatelli; Nicholas J. Turro; Melvin Eisner; Pier Raimondo Crippa; Shosuke Ito; Kazumasa Wakamatsu; William D. Bush; Weslyn C. Ward; John D. Simon; Fabio A. Zucca

Neuronal pigments of melanic type were identified in the putamen, cortex, cerebellum, and other major regions of human brain. These pigments consist of granules 30 nm in size, contained in organelles together with lipid droplets, and they accumulate in aging, reaching concentrations as high as 1.5–2.6 μg/mg tissue in major brain regions. These pigments, which we term neuromelanins, contain melanic, lipid, and peptide components. The melanic component is aromatic in structure, contains a stable free radical, and is synthesized from the precursor molecule cysteinyl-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine. This contrasts with neuromelanin of the substantia nigra, where the melanic precursor is cysteinyl-dopamine. These neuronal pigments have some structural similarities to the melanin found in skin. The precursors of lipid components of the neuromelanins are the polyunsaturated lipids present in the surrounding organelles. The synthesis of neuromelanins in the various regions of the human brain is an important protective process because the melanic component is generated through the removal of reactive/toxic quinones that would otherwise cause neurotoxicity. Furthermore, the resulting melanic component serves an additional protective role through its ability to chelate and accumulate metals, including environmentally toxic metals such as mercury and lead.


Organic Letters | 2012

New Rhodamine Nitroxide Based Fluorescent Probes for Intracellular Hydroxyl Radical Identification in Living Cells

Nazmiye B. Yapici; Steffen Jockusch; Alberto Moscatelli; Srinivas Rao Mandalapu; Yasuhiro Itagaki; Dallas K. Bates; Sherri Wiseman; K. Michael Gibson; Nicholas J. Turro; Lanrong Bi

The synthesis, characteristics, and biological applications of a series of new rhodamine nitroxide fluorescent probes that enable imaging of hydroxyl radicals (•OH) in living cells are described. These probes are highly selective for •OH in aqueous solution, avoiding interference from other reactive oxygen species (ROS), and they facilitate •OH imaging in biologically active samples. The robust nature of these probes (high specificity and selectivity, and facile synthesis) offer distinct advantages over previous methods for •OH detection.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Controlled Doping in Thin-Film Transistors of Large Contorted Aromatic Compounds†

Shengxiong Xiao; Seok Ju Kang; Yu Zhong; Shengguo Zhang; Amy M. Scott; Alberto Moscatelli; Nicholas J. Turro; Michael L. Steigerwald; Hexing Li; Colin Nuckolls

Bigger and better: The new thin-film organic material octabenzcircumbiphenyl (OBCB; see scheme) forms an active layer in a field effect transistor, which can be switched simultaneously with two different inputs, that is, electrical bias and protonation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

EPR analysis and DFT computations of a series of polynitroxides.

M. Francesca Ottaviani; Alberto Modelli; Olaf Zeika; Steffen Jockusch; Alberto Moscatelli; Nicholas J. Turro

Polynitroxides with varying numbers of nitroxide groups (one to four) derived from different aromatic core structures show intramolecular electron spin-spin coupling. The scope of this study is to establish an easy methodology for extracting structural, dynamical, and thermodynamical information from the EPR spectra of these polynitroxides which might find use as spin probes in complex systems, such as biological and host/guest systems, and as polarizing agents in dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) applications. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations at the B3LYP/6-31G(d) level provided information on the structural details such as bond lengths and angles in the gas phase, which were compared with the single crystal X-ray diffraction data in the solid state. Polarizable continuum model (PCM) calculations were performed to account for solvent influences. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of the polynitroxides in chloroform were analyzed in detail to extract information such as the percentages of different conformers, hyperfine coupling constants a, and rotational correlation times τ(c). The temperature dependence on the line shape of the EPR spectra gave thermodynamic parameters ΔH and ΔS for the conformational transitions. These parameters were found to depend on the number and relative positions of the nitroxide and other polar groups.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Electric-Field-Induced Fluorescence Quenching in Polyfluorene, Ladder-Type Polymers, and MEH-PPV Evidence for Field Effects on Internal Conversion Rates in the Low Concentration Limit

Alberto Moscatelli; Kathryn Livingston; Woong Young So; Suk Jun Lee; Ullrich Scherf; Jurjen Wildeman; Linda A. Peteanu

Electric field-induced fluorescence quenching has been measured for a series of conjugated polymers with applications in organic light-emitting diodes. Electrofluorescence measurements on isolated chains in a glassy matrix at 77 K show that the quenching efficiency for poly[2-methoxy-5-(2-ethylhexyloxy)-p-phenylenevinylene] (MEH-PPV) is an order of magnitude larger than that for either a ladder-type polymer (MeLPPP) or polyfluorene (PFH). This effect is explained in terms of the relatively high probability of field-enhanced internal conversion deactivation in MEH-PPV relative to either MeLPPP or PFH. These data, obtained under dilute sample conditions such that chain-chain interactions are minimal, are contrasted with the much higher quenching efficiencies observed in the corresponding polymer films, and several explanations for the differences are considered. In addition, the values of the change in dipole moment and change in polarizability on excitation (|Δμ| and tr(Δα), respectively) are reported, and trends in these values as a function of molecular structure and chain length are discussed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Time-resolved EPR study of singlet oxygen in the gas phase.

Marco Ruzzi; Elena Sartori; Alberto Moscatelli; Igor V. Khudyakov; Nicholas J. Turro

X-band EPR spectra of singlet O2((1)Δg) and triplet O2((3)Σg(-)) were observed in the gas phase under low molecular-oxygen pressures PO2 = 0.175-0.625 Torr, T = 293-323 K. O2((1)Δg) was produced by quenching of photogenerated triplet sensitizers naphthalene C8H10, perdeuterated naphthalene, and perfluoronaphthalene in the gas phase. The EPR spectrum of O2((1)Δg) was also observed under microwave discharge. Integrated intensities and line widths of individual components of the EPR spectrum of O2((3)Σg(-)) were used as internal standards for estimating the concentration of O2 species and PO2 in the EPR cavity. Time-resolved (TR) EPR experiments of C8H10 were the main focus of this Article. Pulsed irradiation of C8H10 in the presence of O2((3)Σg(-)) allowed us to determine the kinetics of formation and decay for each of the four components of the O2((1)Δg) EPR signal, which lasted for only a few seconds. We found that the kinetics of EPR-component decay fit nicely to a biexponential kinetics law. The TR EPR 2D spectrum of the third component of the O2((1)Δg) EPR spectrum was examined in experiments using C8H10. This spectrum vividly presents the time evolution of an EPR component. The largest EPR signal and the longest lifetime of O2((1)Δg), τ = 0.4 s, were observed at medium pressure PO2 = 0.4 Torr, T = 293 K. The mechanism of O2((1)Δg) decay in the presence of photosensitizers is discussed. EPR spectra of O2((1)Δg) evidence that the spin-rotational states of O2((1)Δg) are populated according to Boltzmann distribution in the studied time range of 10-100 ms. We believe that this is the first report dealing with the dependence of O2((1)Δg) EPR line width on PO2 and T.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Electroabsorption of dimers containing MM (M = Mo, W) quadruply bonded units: insights into the electronic structure of neutral coupled redox centers and their relationship with mixed valence ions.

Malcolm H. Chisholm; Benjamin J. Lear; Alberto Moscatelli; Linda A. Peteanu

The electroabsorption spectra for the metal-to-ligand charge transfer transition in complexes containing oxalate and terephthalate bridged MM quadruply bonded units, [(MM)(pivalate)(3)](2)-mu(2)-BR, where M = Mo or W and BR = oxalate or terephthalate, are reported. The measured magnitude of the change in dipole moment (|Deltamu|) and the change in polarizability (Deltaalpha) that accompany this electronic transition are found to be small and not to follow the behavior expected on the basis of the two-state model. In addition, the trend in the value of Deltaalpha for the neutral states is mirrored by the trend in the degree of electronic coupling (H(AB)) for the strongly coupled mixed valence states formed by the same complexes in their singly oxidized states.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2004

Synthesis of Micelle-Templated Silicas from Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide/1,3,5-Trimethylbenzene Micelles

M. Francesca Ottaviani; Alberto Moscatelli; Delphine Desplantier-Giscard; Francesco Di Renzo; Patricia J. Kooyman; Bruno Alonso; Anne Galarneau


Langmuir | 2003

Interactions of Hydrophobically Modified Polyelectrolytes with Surfactants of the Same Charge

Puspendu Deo; Steffen Jockusch; M. Francesca Ottaviani; Alberto Moscatelli; Nicholas J. Turro; P. Somasundaran


Langmuir | 2007

Interactions of a hydrophobically modified polymer with oppositely charged surfactants.

Puspendu Deo; Namita Deo; P. Somasundaran; Alberto Moscatelli; Steffen Jockusch; Nicholas J. Turro; K. P. Ananthapadmanabhan; M. Francesca Ottaviani

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Linda A. Peteanu

Carnegie Mellon University

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