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Siddhartha Maiti

Researcher at Indian Institute of Technology Bombay

Publications -  22
Citations -  777

Siddhartha Maiti is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 379 citations. Previous affiliations of Siddhartha Maiti include University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.

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α-Synuclein aggregation nucleates through liquid-liquid phase separation.

TL;DR: In vitro generated α-Syn liquid-like droplets eventually undergo a liquid-to-solid transition and form an amyloid hydrogel that contains oligomers and fibrillar species and this work provides detailed insights into the phase-separation behaviour of natively unstructured α- Syn and its conversion to a disease-associated aggregated state, which is highly relevant in Parkinson's disease pathogenesis.
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Rhodium catalyzed template-assisted distal para-C–H olefination

TL;DR: First example of template assisted rhodium catalyzed para-C–H alkenylation is reported, and it is reported that this example is the first example to be reported of template assist alkenYLation in a Reaction with Rhodium.
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Palladium-Catalyzed Directed meta-Selective C−H Allylation of Arenes: Unactivated Internal Olefins as Allyl Surrogates

TL;DR: Experimental and computational studies shed light on the mechanism and point to key steric control in the palladacycle, thus determining product selectivities.
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Cobalt-Catalyzed C(sp2)–H Allylation of Biphenyl Amines with Unbiased Terminal Olefins

TL;DR: A C-H functionalization protocol of aromatic amines with unactivated olefins with exclusive allylic selectivity for the distal ring of the biphenyl system by exploiting a readily available cobalt(II) catalyst is disclosed.
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Reaction-based turn-on fluorescent probes with magnetic responses for Fe2+ detection in live cells

TL;DR: Turn on, reaction-based coumarin and rhodamine-linked nitroxide probes (Cou-T and Rh-T) for selective detection of Fe(2+) in solution and in living cells and the detection and mechanism were verified by the magnetic properties of the probe via electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in Solution and in cells.