L

Linoy Dery

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

ORCID: 0000-0001-8584-4840

Publishes on Analytical chemistry methods development, Electrochemical Analysis and Applications, Electrochemical sensors and biosensors. 11 papers and 332 citations.

11Publications
332Total Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Insights into the deselenization of selenocysteine into alanine and serine
Shahar Dery, Post Sai Reddy, Linoy Dery et al.|Chemical Science|2015
Cited by 111Open Access

The development of native chemical ligation coupled with desulfurization has allowed ligation at several new ligation junctions. However, desulfurization also converts all cysteine residues in the protein sequence into alanine. Deselenization of selenocysteine, in contrast, selectively removes the selenol group to give alanine in the presence of unprotected cysteines. In this study we shed more light onto the deselenization mechanism of selenocysteine to alanine and provide optimized conditions for the reaction. The deselenization can be accomplished in one minute under anaerobic conditions to give alanine. Under aerobic conditions (oxygen saturation), selenocysteine is converted into serine.

Electrochemical deposition of N-heterocyclic carbene monolayers on metal surfaces
Einav Amit, Linoy Dery, Shahar Dery et al.|Nature Communications|2020
Cited by 76Open Access

Abstract N -heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) have been widely utilized for the formation of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on various surfaces. The main methodologies for preparation of NHCs-based SAMs either requires inert atmosphere and strong base for deprotonation of imidazolium precursors or the use of specifically-synthesized precursors such as NHC(H)[HCO 3 ] salts or NHC–CO 2 adducts. Herein, we demonstrate an electrochemical approach for surface-anchoring of NHCs which overcomes the need for dry environment, addition of exogenous strong base or restricting synthetic steps. In the electrochemical deposition, water reduction reaction is used to generate high concentration of hydroxide ions in proximity to a metal electrode. Imidazolium cations were deprotonated by hydroxide ions, leading to carbenes formation that self-assembled on the electrode’s surface. SAMs of NO 2 -functionalized NHCs and dimethyl-benzimidazole were electrochemically deposited on Au films. SAMs of NHCs were also electrochemically deposited on Pt, Pd and Ag films, demonstrating the wide metal scope of this deposition technique.

Accessing human selenoproteins through chemical protein synthesis
Linoy Dery, Post Sai Reddy, Shahar Dery et al.|Chemical Science|2016
Cited by 59Open Access

The human body contains 25 selenoproteins, which contain in their sequence the twenty-first encoded amino acid, selenocysteine. About a dozen of these proteins remain functionally uncharacterized or poorly studied. Challenges in accessing these selenoproteins using traditional recombinant expressions have prevented biological characterization thus far. Chemical protein synthesis has the potential to overcome these hurdles. Here we report the first total chemical syntheses of two human selenoproteins, selenoprotein M (SELM) and selenoprotein W (SELW). The synthesis of the more challenging protein SELM was enabled using recent advances in the field of selenocysteine chemistry. This approach allows the preparation of selenoproteins in milligram quantities and in homogenous form, which should open new horizons for future studies to pursue a fuller biological understanding of their role in health and disease.

Influence of Charged Self-Assembled Monolayers on Single Nanoparticle Collision
Linoy Dery, Shahar Dery, Elad Gross et al.|Analytical Chemistry|2023
Cited by 24Open Access

Studying nanoparticle (NP)-electrode interactions in single nanoparticle collision events is critical to understanding dynamic processes such as nanoparticle motion, adsorption, oxidation, and catalytic activity, which are abundant on electrode surfaces. Herein, NP-electrode electrostatic interactions are studied by tracking the oxidation of AgNPs at Au microelectrodes functionalized with charged self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Tuning the charge of short alkanethiol-based monolayers and selecting AgNPs that can be partially or fully oxidized upon impact enabled probing the influence of attractive and repulsive NP-electrode electrostatic interactions on collision frequency, electron transfer, and nanoparticle sizing. We find that repulsive electrostatic interactions lead to a significant decrease in collision frequency and erroneous nanoparticle sizing. In stark difference, attractive electrostatic interactions dramatically increase the collision frequency and extend the sizing capability to larger nanoparticle sizes. Thus, these findings demonstrate how NP-monolayer interactions can be studied and manipulated by combining nanoimpact electrochemistry and functionalized SAMs.