https://www.selleckchem.com/products/mcc950-sodium-salt.html Metabolic glycan labeling (MGL) has been employed for diverse purposes, such as cell surface glycan imaging and tumor surface engineering. We herein reported organelle-specific MGL (OMGL) for selective tagging of the inner limiting membrane of lysosomes over the cell surface. This is operated via acidity-promoted accumulation of optical probes in lysosomes and bioorthogonal ligation of the trapped probes with 9-azidosialic acid (AzSia) metabolically installed on lysosomal membrane proteins. Overcoming the limitation of classical organelle probes to dissipate from stressed organelles, OMGL enables optical tracking of pH-elevated lysosomes in exocytosis and membrane-permeabilized lysosomes in different cell death pathways. Thus, OMGL offers a new tool to study lysosome biology.In this work, we explore the possibility of promoting the formation of ordered microphases by confinement of colloids with competing interactions in ordered porous materials. For that aim, we consider three families of porous materials modeled as cubic primitive, diamond, and gyroid bicontinuous phases. The structure of the confined colloids is investigated by means of grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations in thermodynamic conditions at which either a cluster crystal or a cylindrical phase is stable in bulk. We find that by tuning the size of the unit cell of these porous materials, numerous novel ordered microphases can be produced, including cluster crystals arranged into close packed and open lattices as well as nonparallel cylindrical phases.Carbon dioxide scrubbing by aqueous amine solution is considered as a promising technology for post-combustion CO2 capture, while mitigating climate change. The lack of physicochemical details for this process, especially at the interface between the gas and the condensed phase, limits our capability in designing novel and more cost-effective scrubbing systems. Here, we present classical and