Archive for May, 2011

Anticancer drug found to cause zinc deficiency

Cisplatin is responsible for abnormally low zinc levels in patients undergoing chemotherapy, say scientists in China and the UK.

Platinum-based compounds, like cisplatin, are the most widely used anticancer drugs in medicine. Research shows that up to 98 per cent of cisplatin binds to blood plasma proteins, particularly albumin. Until now, little has been known about the specific binding sites for platinum on albumin. ‘Since albumin plays a major role in cisplatin metabolism, a better understanding of its interactions with albumin should lead to more effective use of the drug and avoidance or control of side effects,’ says Peter Sadler from the University of Warwick, in the UK.

Cisplatin (structure in the middle) reacts with recombinant human albumin (rHA) (blue and green structures) to create a cisplatin-rHA adduct, which displaces zinc, causing a deficiency

Together with Fuyi Wang’s team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, Sadler used mass spectroscopy techniques to reveal that cisplatin reacts with recombinant human albumin (rHA) to create a cisplatin-rHA adduct. The platinum occupies zinc binding sites on the albumin, displacing the zinc, which causes hypozincemia (lack of zinc for metabolic processes) and hyperzincuria (increased zinc in urine). 

 

 Would you like to know more? Then read the full story on the Chemistry World website and download the ChemComm communication.

 

 

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Meet our author… Martin Blaber

Martin Blaber, an enthusiastic surface chemist, working as a post-doctoral researcher for Professor Schatz at Northwestern University, in the US, takes some time away from his research to speak with us… 

Blaber’s recent communication, published in ChemComm, reports some of the challenges that come with using nanosphere dimers for surface enhanced ramana spectroscopy (SERS) at long wavelengths: Extending SERS into the infrared with gold nanosphere dimers 

 

Martin Blaber

 What initially inspired you to become a scientist? 

It was definitely nanotechnology.  While at at high school, I got very excited about the possibility of nanobots! Not the malevolent world destroyers, but rather the constructors of sky scrapers and converters of refuse into sports cars etc. The possibilities were endless! I enrolled in a BSc majoring in nanotechnology. After learning that bacteriophages could be programmed to build battery terminals and other wonderful things, I decided that micromachines were best left to biologists and I swapped nanobots for nanoplasmonics, eventually completing a PhD studying alternative materials for nanoplasmonic systems. 

What was your motivation behind the work described in your ChemComm article? 

Electric Field Enhancement!
SERS can be used to detect tiny amounts of many industrially, scientifically and socially important chemicals. SERS is used to identify counterfeit currency, detect chemical warfare agents and help art historians determine pigments for preservation projects. A major component of the enhancement in SERS is due to the localisation of electric fields around metallic nanoparticles when they are irradiated with light. This phenomenon is known as surface plasmon resonance. Our work involved trying to maximise the electric field enhancement around a dimer of gold nanospheres so that molecules attached to the surface of the spheres would have the largest possible surface enhanced Raman signal. This work grew out of previous studies noting that SERS intensity increased with increasing surface plasmon resonance wavelength. If the maximum field enhancement reaches approximately 1012, single molecules should be readily detectable. It turns out that in our case, the field enhancement follows a trend that causes the enhancement to “max out” for laser wavelengths of around 700 nm, limiting the average field enhancement to 108.
 

  

Why did you choose ChemComm to publish your work? 

ChemComm recently published a special issue dedicated to SERS* that I thought would help broaden both the readership and impact of our article. 

Where do you see your research heading next? 

In this article we investigated a very specific system to determine how the field enhancement scales with surface plasmon resonance wavelength. Trends like this are geometry dependent, and there is such a multitude of other nanoparticle geometries that are readily fabricated via wet chemistry that the possibilities are essentially endless! 

What do enjoy doing in your spare time?
Cycling, listening to music, watching movies, spending time with family and friends.
 

If you could not be a scientist, but could be anything else, what would you be?
I thought I’d like to be an M.D. but clumsiness and scalpels don’t go well together, so I’d settle for being an astronaut.
 

  

*ChemComm recently published a SERS web-themed issue, guest edited by Duncan Graham, Zhongqun Tian and Richard Van Duyne. Interested in SERS? Then take a look at our online collection of articles today! 

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Titanate cigarette filter

Cigarette in a handChinese researchers have shown for the first time that nanomaterials made from titanium dioxide (TiO2) can be used in cigarette filters to significantly reduce the amount of harmful chemicals inhaled by smokers. They say it offers a cheaper and safer alternative than using carbon-based nanomaterials and show potential for use in other filtering devices including gas masks and air purification systems. 

Current cigarette filters are made from cellulose acetate, which absorbs some of the toxic and carcinogenic compounds present in tobacco smoke, including tar, nicotine, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and tobacco-specific nitrosamines. In recent years, scientists have attempted to improve standard filters by adding nanomaterials, including carbon nanotubes or mesoporous silica, to capture more of these chemicals. But these experimental methods remain expensive and could pose unknown health risks. 

Now, Mingdeng Wei’s lab at Fuzhou University in Fujian province, together with colleagues at the Fujian Tobacco Industrial Corporation, Xiamen, have found that titanate nanosheets and nanotubes can filter tobacco smoke. ‘A great range of harmful compounds including tar, nicotine, ammonia, hydrogen cyanide, selected carbonyls and phenolic compounds can be reduced efficiently,’ says Wei. 
Intrigued? Read the full news story in Chemistry World and download the ChemComm communication.
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ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship – winner announced

On behalf of the ChemComm Editorial Board, I am delighted to announce that Dr Scott Dalgarno (Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh, UK) has won the inaugural ChemComm Emerging Investigator Lectureship.

This annual award recognises an emerging scientist in the early stages of their independent academic career. The Editorial Board commended Dr Dalgarno’s contributions to the field of supramolecular chemistry, in particular the assembly and properties of calixarenes.  

Dr Dalgarno will present his award lecture, entitled ‘Metal-Organic Calixarene Assemblies’, at the following locations:

For more details about these lectures, please contact ChemComm Editor, Robert Eagling.

To find out more about Dr Dalgarno’s research, read these recent ChemComm articles:
Calix[4]arene supported clusters: a dimer of [MnIIIMnII] dimers
Stephanie M. Taylor, Ruaraidh D. McIntosh, Christine M. Beavers, Simon J. Teat, Stergios Piligkos, Scott J. Dalgarno and Euan K. Brechin, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 1440-1442

Calixarene supported enneanuclear Cu(II) clusters
Georgios Karotsis, Stuart Kennedy, Scott J. Dalgarno and Euan K. Brechin, Chem. Commun., 2010, 46, 3884-3886

Magnetism in metal–organic capsules
Jerry L. Atwood, Euan K. Brechin, Scott J. Dalgarno, Ross Inglis, Leigh F. Jones, Andrew Mossine, Martin J. Paterson, Nicholas P. Power and Simon J. Teat, Chem. Commun., 2010, 46, 3484-3486

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