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Creators/Authors contains: "Baldwin, Michael"

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  1. Khatib, Sheima J; Groppo, Elena (Ed.)
    The CO2 hydrogenation (HYD) reaction was investigated over Ni phosphide (Ni3P, Ni12P5, Ni2P) catalysts to probe the effect of the NixPy phase on photo-thermal catalytic properties in comparison to Ni metal. The light absorption properties of 2.5 wt% NixPy/SiO2 catalysts differ substantially, with the extent of light absorption decreasing as the P/Ni molar ratio of the Ni phosphide phase increases. This finding directly impacts the photo-thermal catalytic properties as the photo-enhancement (light activity / dark activity) correlates linearly with the extent of light absorption. For comparison purposes, 2.5 wt% Ni/SiO2 catalysts were also investigated and showed high activity but suffered from low CO selectivity (57-68%). A Ni3P/SiO2 catalyst was the most active of the Ni phosphides with high CO selectivity (>95%), while Ni12P5/SiO2 and Ni2P/SiO2 catalysts had lower CO2 HYD activities but CO selectivities above 98%. Upon light exposure, the NixPy/SiO2 (and Ni/SiO2) catalysts exhibited significant rises of temperature (~200 K increase from room temperature), indicating the importance of photothermal heating in increasing the CO2 HYD rate. The findings highlight how a non-metal element (i.e., P) plays a crucial role in tailoring the photo-thermal catalytic properties of earth abundant nickel metal. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  2. AlkB is a bacterial Fe(II)– and 2-oxoglutarate–dependent dioxygenase that repairs a wide range of alkylated nucleobases in DNA and RNA as part of the adaptive response to exogenous nucleic acid–alkylating agents. Although there has been longstanding interest in the structure and specificity of Escherichia coli AlkB and its homologs, difficulties in assaying their repair activities have limited our understanding of their substrate specificities and kinetic mechanisms. Here, we used quantitative kinetic approaches to determine the transient kinetics of recognition and repair of alkylated DNA by AlkB. These experiments revealed that AlkB is a much faster alkylation repair enzyme than previously reported and that it is significantly faster than DNA repair glycosylases that recognize and excise some of the same base lesions. We observed that whereas 1, N 6 -ethenoadenine can be repaired by AlkB with similar efficiencies in both single- and double-stranded DNA, 1-methyladenine is preferentially repaired in single-stranded DNA. Our results lay the groundwork for future studies of AlkB and its human homologs ALKBH2 and ALKBH3. 
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  3. null (Ed.)