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Dive into the research topics where Mirianas Chachisvilis is active.

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Featured researches published by Mirianas Chachisvilis.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Conformationally Constrained Macrocyclic Diporphyrin-Fullerene Artificial Photosynthetic Reaction Center

Vikas Garg; Gerdenis Kodis; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Michael Hambourger; Ana L. Moore; Thomas A. Moore; Devens Gust

Photosynthetic reaction centers convert excitation energy from absorbed sunlight into chemical potential energy in the form of a charge-separated state. The rates of the electron transfer reactions necessary to achieve long-lived, high-energy charge-separated states with high quantum yields are determined in part by precise control of the electronic coupling among the chromophores, donors, and acceptors and of the reaction energetics. Successful artificial photosynthetic reaction centers for solar energy conversion have similar requirements. Control of electronic coupling in particular necessitates chemical linkages between active component moieties that both mediate coupling and restrict conformational mobility so that only spatial arrangements that promote favorable coupling are populated. Toward this end, we report the synthesis, structure, and photochemical properties of an artificial reaction center containing two porphyrin electron donor moieties and a fullerene electron acceptor in a macrocyclic arrangement involving a ring of 42 atoms. The two porphyrins are closely spaced, in an arrangement reminiscent of that of the special pair in bacterial reaction centers. The molecule is produced by an unusual cyclization reaction that yields mainly a product with C(2) symmetry and trans-2 disubstitution at the fullerene. The macrocycle maintains a rigid, highly constrained structure that was determined by UV-vis spectroscopy, NMR, mass spectrometry, and molecular modeling at the semiempirical PM6 and DFT (B3LYP/6-31G**) levels. Transient absorption results for the macrocycle in 2-methyltetrahydrofuran reveal photoinduced electron transfer from the porphyrin first excited singlet state to the fullerene to form a P(•+)-C(60)(•-)-P charge separated state with a time constant of 1.1 ps. Photoinduced electron transfer to the fullerene excited singlet state to form the same charge-separated state has a time constant of 15 ps. The charge-separated state is formed with a quantum yield of essentially unity and has a lifetime of 2.7 ns. The ultrafast charge separation coupled with charge recombination that is over 2000 times slower is consistent with a very rigid molecular structure having a small reorganization energy for electron transfer, relative to related porphyrin-fullerene molecules.


Applied Optics | 2003

Optical forces for noninvasive cellular analysis

Mark M. Wang; Catherine A. Schnabel; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Rong Yang; Michael J. Paliotti; Laura Simons; Laura McMullin; Norbert Hagen; Kristie L. Lykstad; Eugene Tu; Luis M. Pestana; Sudipto Sur; Haichuan Zhang; William F. Butler; Ilona Kariv; Philippe J. Marchand

A novel, noninvasive measurement technique for quantitative cellular analysis is presented that utilizes the forces generated by an optical beam to evaluate the physical properties of live cells in suspension. In this analysis, a focused, near-infrared laser line with a high cross-sectional intensity gradient is rapidly scanned across a field of cells, and the interaction of those cells with the beam is monitored. The response of each cell to the laser depends on its size, structure, morphology, composition, and surface membrane properties; therefore, with this technique, cell populations of different type, treatment, or biological state can be compared. To demonstrate the utility of this cell analysis platform, we evaluated the early stages of apoptosis induced in the U937 cancer cell line by the drug camptothecin and compared the results with established reference assays. Measurements on our platform show detection of cellular changes earlier than either of the fluorescence-based Annexin V or caspase assays. Because no labeling or additional cell processing is required and because accurate assays can be performed with a small number of cells, this measurement technique may find suitable applications in cell research, medical diagnostics, and drug discovery.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Multiporphyrin arrays with π-π interchromophore interactions.

Yuichi Terazono; Gerdenis Kodis; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Brian R. Cherry; Maxime Fournier; Ana L. Moore; Thomas A. Moore; Devens Gust

A recently reported synthetic method has been employed to prepare several arrays of free base and zinc porphyrins. In the arrays, the porphyrins are arranged around a central benzene ring. The lack of aryl rings in the linkages to the central benzene ring, coupled with the presence of only one meso-aryl substituent on each porphyrin, allows strong electronic interactions between the porphyrin macrocycles. In arrays containing two or six porphyrins, a variety of evidence indicates that the porphyrins exist as twist-stacked dimers reminiscent of the special pairs of bacteriochlorophylls found in some photosynthetic bacteria. These dimers feature van der Waals contact between the macrocycles, and demonstrate excitonic splitting due to π-π interactions. The excitonic effects split and blue-shift the Soret absorptions, and slightly broaden the Q-band absorptions and shift them to longer wavelengths. The interactions also lower the first oxidation potentials by ca. 100 mV, and the arrays show evidence for delocalization of the radical cation over both porphyrins in the dimer. The arrays demonstrate singlet-singlet energy transfer among the chromophores. Arrays of this type will be good models for some aspects of the interactions of photosynthetic pigments, including those of reaction center special pairs and possibly quantum coherence effects. They can also be useful in artificial photosynthetic constructs.


Nature Communications | 2015

A molecular propeller effect for chiral separation and analysis.

Jonathon B. Clemens; Osman Kibar; Mirianas Chachisvilis

Enantiomers share nearly identical physical properties but have different chiral geometries, making their identification and separation difficult. Here we show that when exposed to a rotating electric field, the left- and right-handed chiral molecules rotate with the field and act as microscopic propellers; moreover, owing to their opposite handedness, they propel along the axis of field rotation in opposite directions. We introduce a new molecular parameter called hydrodynamic chirality to characterize the coupling of rotational motion of a chiral molecule into its translational motion and quantify the direction and velocity of such motion. We demonstrate >80% enrichment level of counterpart enantiomers in solution without using chiral selectors or circularly polarized light. We expect our results to have an impact on multiple applications in drug discovery, analytical and chiral chemistry, including determination of absolute configuration, as well as in influencing the understanding of artificial and natural molecular systems where rotational motion of the molecules is involved.


Nature Communications | 2015

Erratum: A molecular propeller effect for chiral separation and analysis

Jonathon B. Clemens; Osman Kibar; Mirianas Chachisvilis

Nature Communications 6: Article number: 7868 10.1038/ncomms8868 (2015); Published: July282015; Updated: September182015


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

Elastic light scattering studies from single cells in optical trap

Dakota Watson; Norbert Hagen; Jonathan Diver; Philippe Marchand; Mirianas Chachisvilis

Light-scattering diagrams (phase functions) from single living cells and beads suspended in an optical trap were recorded with 30 ms time resolution. The intensity of the scattered light was recorded over an angular range of 0.5-179.5° using an optical setup based on an elliptical mirror and rotating aperture. Experiments revealed that light-scattering diagrams from biological cells exhibit significant and complex time dependence.


Archive | 2004

Methods and apparatus for sorting cells using an optical switch in a microfluidic channel network

William F. Butler; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Robert Dees; Norbert Hagen; Philippe J. Marchand; Daniel E. Raymond; Eugene Tu; Mark M. Wang; Joon Mo Yang; Rong Yang; Haichuan Zhang


Biophysical Journal | 2004

Elastic light scattering from single cells: orientational dynamics in optical trap.

Dakota Watson; Norbert Hagen; Jonathan Diver; Philippe Marchand; Mirianas Chachisvilis


Archive | 2002

Methods and apparatus for optophoretic diagnosis of cells and particles

Haichuan Zhang; Thomas Dy Chung; Jeff Hall; William Soohoo; Josh Kohrumel; Eugene Tu; Mark M. Wang; Daniel E. Raymond; Philippe Marchand; Jonathan Diver; William F. Butler; Phan Nguyen; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Andrew S. Katz; Norbert Hagen; Kris Lykstad; Luis M. Pestana


Analytical Biochemistry | 2004

Use of moving optical gradient fields for analysis of apoptotic cellular responses in a chronic myeloid leukemia cell model

Anita H. Forster; Mark M. Wang; William F. Butler; Mirianas Chachisvilis; Thomas Dy Chung; Sadik C. Esener; Jeff Hall; Osman Kibar; Kristie L. Lykstad; Philippe Marchand; Elinore M Mercer; Luis M. Pestana; Sudipto Sur; Eugene Tu; Rong Yang; Haichuan Zhang; Ilona Kariv

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Mark M. Wang

University of California

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Osman Kibar

University of California

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Haichuan Zhang

University of California

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Jeff Hall

University of California

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Ana L. Moore

Arizona State University

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Devens Gust

Arizona State University

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Gerdenis Kodis

Arizona State University

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