Understanding B1 Deficiency

Chemists Crack 67-Year-Old Vitamin B1 Mystery at UC Riverside

UC Riverside chemists have achieved the impossible: confirming a 67-year-old theory about vitamin B1 by stabilizing a super-reactive molecule in water! 💧 This game-changing discovery not only cracks a biochemical mystery but also sets the stage for greener, more sustainable ways to make medicines. 🌱

UCR’s Vincent Lavallo, left, and Aaron Gregory, right, who helped prove a 67-year-old chemistry hypothesis. (Stan Lim/UCR)

The molecule at the center of this breakthrough is a carbene—a carbon atom with only six valence electrons, making it wildly unstable, especially in water. Back in 1958, chemist Ronald Breslow suggested that vitamin B1 (thiamine) might create a carbene-like structure to power essential reactions in our bodies. 🧬 But since carbenes usually fall apart in water, his idea remained unproven—until now.

Led by UCR chemistry professor Vincent Lavallo, the team generated a stable carbene in water, bottled it, and watched it stay intact for months! 📅 Their findings, published in Science Advances, are the first proof that a carbene can survive in water. “People thought this was nuts,” Lavallo said. “But Breslow was spot-on!” ✅

How They Pulled It Off 🛡️

The secret? The team built a molecular “shield” to protect the carbene from water and other molecules. This allowed them to study it with high-tech tools like nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and x-ray crystallography, confirming its stability beyond doubt. 🔬

“We didn’t set out to prove Breslow’s theory,” said Varun Raviprolu, the study’s first author and a former UCR grad student now at UCLA. “But our work ended up validating his vision from decades ago!” 🎯

Why This Is a Big Deal 🌍

“Water is the perfect solvent,” Raviprolu said. “If we can make catalysts work in it, that’s a huge win for sustainable chemistry!” 💚

A Moment to Celebrate 🎓

For Lavallo, a 20-year veteran of carbene research, this is a career-defining moment. “Thirty years ago, people said these molecules were impossible,” he said. “Now we’re bottling them in water!” 🧪

Raviprolu sees it as a reminder to keep exploring. “What seems impossible today could be reality tomorrow if we keep supporting science,” he said. 🌟

This discovery honors Breslow’s 1958 insight and lights the way for a future of cleaner chemistry and deeper biochemical understanding. 🙌

Source – news.ucr.edu

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