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Dive into the research topics where Eric Täuscher is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Täuscher.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Small molecules intercept Notch signaling and the early secretory pathway

Andreas Krämer; Torben Mentrup; Bertrand Kleizen; Eric Rivera-Milla; Daniela Reichenbach; Christoph Enzensperger; Richard Nohl; Eric Täuscher; Helmar Görls; Aspasia Ploubidou; Christoph Englert; Oliver Werz; Hans-Dieter Arndt; Christoph Kaether

Notch signaling has a pivotal role in numerous cell-fate decisions, and its aberrant activity leads to developmental disorders and cancer. To identify molecules that influence Notch signaling, we screened nearly 17,000 compounds using automated microscopy to monitor the trafficking and processing of a ligand-independent Notch-enhanced GFP (eGFP) reporter. Characterization of hits in vitro by biochemical and cellular assays and in vivo using zebrafish led to five validated compounds, four of which induced accumulation of the reporter at the plasma membrane by inhibiting γ-secretase. One compound, the dihydropyridine FLI-06, disrupted the Golgi apparatus in a manner distinct from that of brefeldin A and golgicide A. FLI-06 inhibited general secretion at a step before exit from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which was accompanied by a tubule-to-sheet morphological transition of the ER, rendering FLI-06 the first small molecule acting at such an early stage in secretory traffic. These data highlight the power of phenotypic screening to enable investigations of central cellular signaling pathways.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Controlling Electronic Transitions in Fullerene van der Waals Aggregates via Supramolecular Assembly.

Saunak Das; Felix Herrmann-Westendorf; Felix H. Schacher; Eric Täuscher; Uwe Ritter; Benjamin Dietzek; Martin Presselt

Morphologies crucially determine the optoelectronic properties of organic semiconductors. Therefore, hierarchical and supramolecular approaches have been developed for targeted design of supramolecular ensembles of organic semiconducting molecules and performance improvement of, e.g., organic solar cells (OSCs), organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), and organic field-effect transistors (OFETs). We demonstrate how the photonic properties of fullerenes change with the formation of van der Waals aggregates. We identified supramolecular structures with broadly tunable absorption in the visible spectral range and demonstrated how to form aggregates with targeted visible (vis) absorption. To control supramolecular structure formation, we functionalized the C60-backbone with polar (bis-polyethylene glycol malonate-MPEG) tails, thus yielding an amphiphilic fullerene derivative that self-assembles at interfaces. Aggregates of systematically tuned size were obtained from concentrating MPEGC60 in stearic acid matrices, while different supramolecular geometries were provoked via different thin film preparation methods, namely spin-casting and Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) deposition from an air-water interface. We demonstrated that differences in molecular orientation in LB films (C2v type point group aggregates) and spin-casting (stochastic aggregates) lead to huge changes in electronic absorption spectra due to symmetry and orientation reasons. These differences in the supramolecular structures, causing the different photonic properties of spin-cast and LB films, could be identified by means of quantum chemical calculations. Employing supramolecular assembly, we propounded that molecular symmetry in fullerene aggregates is extremely important in controlling vis absorption to harvest photons efficiently, when mixed with a donor molecule, thus improving active layer design and performance of OSCs.


Nano Reviews | 2016

Micro-flow assisted synthesis of fluorescent polymer nanoparticles with tuned size and surface properties

Nikunjkumar Visaveliya; Christian Hoffmann; Alexander Groß; Eric Täuscher; Uwe Ritter; J. Michael Koehler

Abstract Numerous different photonics and biomedical applications depend on the fluorescent polymer micro- and nanoparticles. Besides optical or spectroscopic properties, the performance of the polymer nanoparticles is determined by their size, size distribution, and surface charge. Moreover, in order to realize a very uniform performance, the functional polymer nanoparticles should be of high homogeneity and demand for the preparation in a minimum number of synthesis steps. Here, we present a microfluidic-assisted synthesis of different types of reproducible fluorescent polymer nanoparticles with tuned size (40 nm up to 600 nm) and surface charge (ζ potential=-52 mV up to +45 mV). Four different preparation strategies were introduced for fluorophore-functionalized nanoparticles: (a) noncovalent binding of fluorophores with high loading, (b) covalent linking of fluorophores with enhanced stability, (c) surface-anchored fluorophores by hydrophobic interactions for triple function at the same time, and (d) surface immobilization of biomolecules and fluorophore by ionic as well as secondary interactions. In this way, four different classes of nanoparticles suited for different applications were prepared with a spherical shape as a model system. Moreover, the principle has been extended to the different types of nonspherical and composite polymer nanoparticles.


Materials Science Forum | 2010

Synthesis by Stille Cross-Coupling Procedure and Electrochemical Characterization of Branched Polymers Based on Substituted 1,3,5-Triarylbenzenes

Krzysztof R. Idzik; Rainer Beckert; Eric Täuscher; Przemyslaw Ledwon; Sylwia Golba; Mieczyslaw Lapkowski; Peter Rapta; Lothar Dunsch; Jaroslaw Frydel

A series of various substituted 1,3,5-triarylbenzenes, 2,4,6-triaryl-1-phenoles, 1,3,5-triaryl-1-methoxybenzenes and 2,4,6-triaryl-1,3,5-trimethoxybenzenes were synthesized by a Stille cross-coupling procedure. Their structures were confirmed by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, and elemental analysis. Containing thienyl, furyl and EDOT groups polymers obtained in the process of electropolymerization could be carefully considered as a building material in a wide range of organic-electronic devices. We compare properties of monomers and related polymers depending on aryls moieties and their influence of hydroxyl and methoxyl groups attached to the central benzene core.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2011

Classical heterocycles with surprising properties: the 4-hydroxy-1,3-thiazoles

Eric Täuscher; Dieter Weiß; Rainer Beckert; Jürgen Fabian; Aline Moreno Chagas Assumpção; Helmar Görls


Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Blue-Emitting Polymers Based on 4-Hydroxythiazoles Incorporated in a Methacrylate Backbone

Roberto Menzel; Alexander M. Breul; Christian Pietsch; Johann Schäfer; Christian Friebe; Eric Täuscher; Dieter Weiß; Benjamin Dietzek; Jürgen Popp; Rainer Beckert; Ulrich S. Schubert


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Hydroxythiazole-Based Fluorescent Probes for Fluoride Ion Detection

Lorena K. Calderón-Ortiz; Eric Täuscher; Erick L. Bastos; Helmar Görls; Dieter Weiß; Rainer Beckert


Zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine Chemie | 2010

The Combination of 4-Hydroxythiazoles with Azaheterocycles: Efficient bidentate Ligands for novel Ruthenium Complexes

Roberto Menzel; Eric Täuscher; Dieter Weiß; Rainer Beckert; Helmar Görls


Polymers | 2015

Synthesis and Complexation of Well-Defined Labeled Poly(N,N-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate)s (PDMAEMA)

Mark Billing; Tobias Rudolph; Eric Täuscher; Rainer Beckert; Felix H. Schacher


Synthesis | 2013

From Liquid to Solid-State Fluorescence: Tricyclic Lactones Based on 4-Hydroxy-1,3-thiazoles

Lorena K. Calderón Ortiz; Hendryk Würfel; Eric Täuscher; Dieter Weiß; Eckhard Birckner; Helmar Görls; Rainer Beckert

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Uwe Ritter

Technische Universität Ilmenau

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