Host cells possess the metabolic assets required for viral infection. Recent studies indicate that control of the host’s metabolic resources is a core host-pathogen interaction. Viruses have evolved mechanisms to usurp the host’s metabolic resources, funneling them towards the production of virion components as well as the organization of specialized compartments for replication, maturation, and dissemination. Consequently, hosts have developed a variety of metabolic countermeasures to sense and resist these viral changes. The complex interplay between virus and host over metabolic control has only just begun to be deconvoluted. However, it is clear that virally induced metabolic reprogramming can substantially impact infectious outcomes, highlighting the promise of targeting these processes for antiviral therapeutic development.
The active chemical state of zinc (Zn) in a zinc-copper (Zn-Cu) catalyst during carbon dioxide/carbon monoxide (CO 2 /CO) hydrogenation has been debated to be Zn oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles, metallic Zn, or a Zn-Cu surface alloy. We used x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy at 180 to 500 millibar to probe the nature of Zn and reaction intermediates during CO 2 /CO hydrogenation over Zn/ZnO/Cu(211), where the temperature is sufficiently high for the reaction to rapidly turn over, thus creating an almost adsorbate-free surface. Tuning of the grazing incidence angle makes it possible to achieve either surface or bulk sensitivity. Hydrogenation of CO 2 gives preference to ZnO in the form of clusters or nanoparticles, whereas in pure CO a surface Zn-Cu alloy becomes more prominent. The results reveal a specific role of CO in the formation of the Zn-Cu surface alloy as an active phase that facilitates efficient CO 2 methanol synthesis.
The interaction of water vapor with a single crystal ZnO(101̅0) surface was investigated using synchrotron-based ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS). Two isobaric experiments were performed at 0.3 and 0.07 Torr water vapor pressure at sample temperatures ranging from 750 to 295 K up to a maximum of 2% relative humidity (RH). Below 10 % RH the ZnO(101̅0) interface is covered with ∼0.25 monolayers of OH groups attributed to dissociation at nonstoichiometric defect sites. At ∼10 % RH there is a sharp onset in increased surface hydroxylation attributed to reaction at stoichiometric terrace sites. The surface saturates with an OH monolayer ∼0.26 nm thick and occurs in the absence of any observable molecularly bound water, suggesting the formation of a 1 × 1 dissociated monolayer structure. This is in stark contrast to ultrahigh vacuum experiments and molecular simulations that show the optimum structure is a 2 × 1 partially dissociated HO/OH monolayer. The sharp onset to terrace site hydroxylation at ∼10 % RH for ZnO(101̅0) contrasts with APXPS observations for MgO(100) which show a sharp onset at 10 % RH. A surface thermodynamic analysis reveals that this shift to lower RH for ZnO(101̅0) compared to MgO(100) is due to a more favorable Gibbs free energy for terrace site hydroxylation.
Minerals constitute a primary ecosystem control on organic C decomposition in soils, and therefore on greenhouse gas fluxes to the atmosphere. Secondary minerals, in particular, Fe and Al (oxyhydr)oxides—collectively referred to as “oxides” hereafter—are prominent protectors of organic C against microbial decomposition through sorption and complexation reactions. However, the impacts of Mn oxides on organic C retention and lability in soils are poorly understood. Here we show that hydrous Mn oxide (HMO), a poorly crystalline δ-MnO2, has a greater maximum sorption capacity for dissolved organic matter (DOM) derived from a deciduous forest composite Oi, Oe, and Oa horizon leachate (“O horizon leachate” hereafter) than does goethite under acidic (pH 5) conditions. Nonetheless, goethite has a stronger sorption capacity for DOM at low initial C:(Mn or Fe) molar ratios compared to HMO, probably due to ligand exchange with carboxylate groups as revealed by attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy–near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy coupled with Mn mass balance calculations reveal that DOM sorption onto HMO induces partial Mn reductive dissolution and Mn reduction of the residual HMO. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy further shows increasing Mn(II) concentrations are correlated with increasing oxidized C (C=O) content (r = 0.78, P < 0.0006) on the DOM–HMO complexes. We posit that DOM is the more probable reductant of HMO, as Mn(II)-induced HMO dissolution does not alter the Mn speciation of the residual HMO at pH 5. At a lower C loading (2 × 102 μg C m−2), DOM desorption—assessed by 0.1 M NaH2PO4 extraction—is lower for HMO than for goethite, whereas the extent of desorption is the same at a higher C loading (4 × 102 μg C m−2). No significant differences are observed in the impacts of HMO and goethite on the biodegradability of the DOM remaining in solution after DOM sorption reaches steady state. Overall, HMO shows a relatively strong capacity to sorb DOM and resist phosphate-induced desorption, but DOM–HMO complexes may be more vulnerable to reductive dissolution than DOM–goethite complexes.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s12932-018-0051-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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