Author Archive

CASH pictures and poster prize winners

New year, new start and it seems that the Catalysis and sensing for Health (CASH) meeting got the ball rolling. Held last week at the University of Bath, many delegates travelled across the globe to be there. It seems much fun was had by all and below you can see a small glimpse into what went on…

Professors Evans, Maruoka and Ishihara enjoying a coffee break in the CASH meeting

Nothing quite like catching up with friends

ChemComm Editor Robert Eagling grabbing a cuppa with conference organiser Tony James and ex-ChemComm Associate Editor Andy Evans

Sir Professor Fraser Stoddart enjoying the Civic Reception at the Roman Baths

Also, many congratulations to the poster prize winners for the RSC Publishing prizes, who each received an RSC book to help them with their studies:-

Poster prize winner Shaomin Ji

Poster prize winner Suying Xu

The general chemistry team (Chemical Science, ChemComm and Chem Soc Rev) will be attending many conferences this year, so why not take a look at our conference plans and see if our paths will cross during 2011? Alternatively, feel free to contact us for information or help with any other questions or queries.

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Hot article round up for January

January can seem like an extra long month for many, with post-holiday blues and dark wintery evenings to contend with. However, the winter solstice has past, so the evenings are gradually getting lighter and here at the ChemComm Editorial Office we have published enough hot articles to keep the blues at bay. So why not take a look at the selection of hot articles below, which caught some of our referees attention…

  • Clostridium botulinum produces the most lethal toxins known to man and, as such, they are high-risk terrorist threats. Alarmingly, there is no approved therapeutic. Why not read Kim Janda‘s communication to find out about a small molecule he’s discovered that inhibits the neurotoxin.                                   
  • Matthias Beller and Anahit Pews-Davtyan synthesised a variety of substituted imidazoles from commercially available starting materials, via a hydroamination–cyclization sequence. Take a look at the communication to see the excellent yields obtained, helped by the presence of catalytic zinc triflate.
  • Enhanced white-light emission was achieved by cleverly loading green- and red-light-emitting donor–acceptor pairs in the separate micellar cores, and inserting blue-light-emitting polymers around their periphery. To find out more on how this system works, take a look at Juan Peng‘s communication.
  • Juyoung Yoon and her colleagues from Ewha Womans University, have developed a unique pyrene-based colourimetric sensor that changes colour, from light yellow to pink, in the presence of lysine. More details can be found in the communication.
  • An observation reported by Gerhard Erker in ChemComm has opened up a new way of utilising frustrated Lewis pair chemistry. To see what has been uncovered in more detail, download their communication today!
  • Andreas Herrmann and co-workers have made ultra-high molecular weight DNA/polymer hybrid materials using molecular biology techniques. Take a look at the communication and read more about this fascinating advance.
  • Molly Stevens and her colleagues have shown that peptide-modified gold nanoparticles can be enzymatically phosphorylated and rapidly aggregated onto a surface or in solution by action of phosphospecific antibodies. The simple and rapid colorimetric response of the assays makes them an attractive approach for drug-screening applications – so why not download the communication to find out more about this exciting research?
  • QM/MM mechanistic modelling has been used to help understand the role of carbamate reactivity in fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibition, as reported in Adrian Mulholland‘s latest communication in ChemComm.
  • Paul O’Brien reports slow temperature growth of crystalline PbS films on plastic substrates by Chemical Vapour Deposition using xanthate. Why not read the communication for further details on the method, as well as looking at the mechanism proposed by the team, with the help of density functional theory calculations.
  • Jeremy Sanders and Ulrich Lüning present the efficient synthesis of a new type of a multi-hydrazone based macrocyclic receptor and investigates its complexation properties with alkali and alkaline earth metal ions using a dynamic combinatorial approach. Read more by downloading the communication today!

All communications have been made freely available until the 7th March 2011, so why not download the ones that interest you today and let us know what you think in our blog below.

If you have some of your own exciting, high impact research to publish then consider submitting your communication to ChemComm, via our online submission system.

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MOF magnets deliver drugs

German scientists have encapsulated nanomagnets inside metal organic frameworks (MOFs). The MOF magnets can be filled with a drug, which is released when a magnetic field is applied. 

Stefan Kaskel from the Technical University of Dresden and colleagues made the MOF magnets by integrating superparamagnetic iron oxide particles into carboxylate MOFs. ‘Carboxylate molecules stabilise and activate the nanoparticles,’ explains team member Martin Lohe.

The group then loaded their MOF with ibuprofen and found that they were able to trigger and control its release by simply applying an external magnetic field. The magnetic field heats the magnets in the MOF, which causes the load to burst from the framework.

Superparamagnetic functionalisation of MOFs enables magnetic heating to trigger drug delivery

MOFs in which the frameworks themselves are magnetic have been made before, but they are not easy to manipulate. Kaskel’s embedded MOF magnets, however, can easily be manipulated from the outside. Magnetic fields can penetrate human skin, and magnetic triggers that could be used to release the drugs are already available on the market. However, before the MOF magnets can be used in the human body, toxicity tests will need to be done.

‘An enhanced sustainability of industrial and medical processes is crucial for our future,’ says Lohe. ‘Magnetically functionalised MOFs could be a small building block on this path.’

‘The particles will certainly increase the possibility of using nanoMOFs for drug delivery applications in the near future,’ agrees Christian Serre, an expert in porous solids from the University of Versailles  in France, ‘and they’ll add a new tool to the emerging domain of MOFs in biomedicine.’ 

Ruth Doherty

 

Link to ChemComm article

 Heating and separation using nanomagnet-functionalized metal–organic frameworks
Martin R. Lohe, Kristina Gedrich, Thomas Freudenberg, Emanuel Kockrick, Til Dellmann and Stefan Kaskel,

Chem. Commun., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/c0cc05278g

 

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Hot article round up for December

So, it’s a new calendar year, new resolutions have been made (and broken!) but before we leave 2010 behind us for good, let’s take a look at some of the hot articles that caught our eye back in December.

 

 

Real-time nucleic acid analysis
The quantification of genes in human cDNA and malaria in blood samples using a real-time PCR technique has been developed by scientists in South Korea. To find out more, download the communication, published by Dae-Ro Ahn and colleagues.

Rauhut–Currier reaction strikes again
Phosphinothioureas can be used as organocatalysts for asymmetric Rauhut-Currier reactions of bis(enones). Xin-Yan Wu and co-workers achieved good yields (up to 99%) with excellent enantioselectivities (up to 99.4% ee). If you’re interested to know more about the reaction conditions used then why not download their communication today?

Observing atomic hydrogen
A nitrogen-induced ionic hydrate system can produce a hydrogen radical from water without direct energy sources, like hydrogen and methane. Read more about this impressive chemistry in the authors’ communication published in ChemComm.

The power of light
A photo-controlled anticancer drug release system has been designed by scientists in China. Based on photo-induced electron transfer between semiconductor quantum dots and an ester derivative, the anticancer drug can be released upon shining visible light onto the sample. Read more about their discovery in their communication article.

Hard graft for better fuel
Grafting highly dispersed Cu(I) onto beta-cyclodextrin shows better adsorptive desulfurisation capacity than other more conventional methods, an important development for the petroleum refining industry, say scientists in China. Xiao-Qin Liu and colleagues from Nanjing University of Technology, have published their communication in ChemComm, read all about it here first!

Imitating micelles
A metal complex has been disguised as a
 micelle using amphiphilic phosphine ligands. The system cleverly switches between a coordination polymer and a discrete cage in response to solvent polarity or pH, acting just like a micelle. Want to know more? Then read Stuart James’ exciting communication published in ChemComm.

Let us know what you think to these hot articles by blogging some comments below. If you have some of your own hot research to publish, then why not submit to ChemComm today!

 

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Meet our author… Jason Camp

Based at Nottingham University in the UK, Jason Camp’s research group focuses on developing mild, sustainable and environmentally friendly synthetic methods for forming added-value compounds from simple starting materials. Specifically, the group are interested in multifaceted catalysis, which is the ability of one metal to catalyse multiple unique processes in a reaction sequence.  

Why not read Jason Camp’s latest ChemComm publication on ‘Gold-Catalysed Rearrangement of O-Vinyl Oximes for the Synthesis of Highly Substituted Pyrroles’? It will be free to access until the 14th February, 2011.

 
Jason took some time out from his research to answer some questions for us…       What initially inspired you to become a scientist?
I grew up in a family of construction workers and was therefore constantly building (and destroying) things, from Lego to Lincoln Logs to forts in the backyard.
This concept of building and creating things carried over into my studies at university and really crystallised during my undergraduate research projects at the University of Adelaide and the University of California, Davis. 

For me, the fascinating thing about being a synthetic chemist is the ability, on a frequent basis, to make something that no one else has ever made or develop a better way to make an important compound. It is the challenge of taking what is known in the literature and building upon it to create something that enticed me into becoming a scientist. 

Why did you choose ChemComm to publish your work?
ChemComm was selected due to its high impact factor, broad readership and rapid turnaround time.
 
What was your motivation behind the work described in you ChemComm article?
The driving philosophy behind this research is the idea that one metal can catalyse multiple steps in a synthetic sequence, multifaceted catalysis. This research seeks to get the most out of the catalytic system, whilst limiting the overall cost in terms of time, waste and expense.
 

Where do you see your research heading next?
The work discussed in this communication underpins one of our major research philosophies and we hope to expand the concepts into a multitude of new reaction manifolds. We are therefore actively pursuing reactions that lend themselves to this sort of multifaceted catalysis process.

 

What do you enjoy doing in your spare time?
Spending time with my family and friends, hiking/biking and travelling the world.
 
If you could not be a scientist, but could be anything else, what would you be?
Travel writer / photographer

If you would like to find out more about Jason and his research, then please visit the Camp Research Group website for further information.

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Toxin sensor for drinking water

A green and simple method to make a sensor to detect one of the most toxic cyanotoxins, microcystin-LR, has been devised by scientists from China. Cyanotoxins are produced by blue-green algae and can contaminate drinking water.

In 1998 the World Health Organisation (WHO) set up a provisional guideline limit of 1 mg L-1 for  microcystin-LR in drinking water so detecting it in the environment is important.

Huangxian Ju and colleagues from Nanjing University made their sensor to detect  microcystin-LR by  assembling gold nanoparticles on nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes. Nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes are less toxic to cells and have better biocompatibility than un-doped carbon nanotubes, making them more suitable for use in biosensors. The nitrogen incorporated in the nanotubes also provides an active site to anchor gold nanoparticles onto. 

 

 The team immobilised an antibody for microcystin-LR on their nanosensor and used it to detect the cyanotoxin in water samples. They found that microcystin-LR could be detected at levels much lower than the limit set out in the WHO guidelines. 

Ju explains that although several methods can detect the presence of microcystin-LR, they are time-consuming, need expensive equipment and advanced technical expertise. Ju’s nanocomposite is cheap to make and shows a wide concentration range, low detection limit, good reproducibility and could successfully detect microcystin-LR in polluted water samples, said the researchers.

‘This system is more biocompatible than existing systems, so leads to enhanced sensitivity for microcystin-LR immunosensing,’ says Dianping Tang, an expert in electrochemical immunoassay technologies from Fuzhou University in China.

Ju hopes to immobilise different metal nanoparticles onto the nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes to make metal nanoparticle/nanotube composites as biocompatible platforms for biosensing and biocatalysis.

Rachel Cooper

 

Link to the ChemComm article:-

 In situ assembly of gold nanoparticles on nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes for sensitive immunosensing of microcystin-LR
Jing Zhang, Jianping Lei, Rong Pan, Chuan Leng, Zheng Hu and Huangxian Ju, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 668
DOI: 10.1039/c0cc04198j

 

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Stimuli responsive DNA walking device

A pH responsive DNA walker has been designed by scientists in China.

Jingsong Ren and colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have shown that the walker can reversibly transport specific molecules along an assembled track under environmental stimuli.

 

The team believe that this work is an important step in obtaining artificial nanomotors with precise motion control and will be highly beneficial for future applications and complex operations in diverse areas ranging from drug delivery to nanoscale assembly or patterning.

 

 

Interested in finding out more? Then download the communication today, published in ChemComm, it will be free to access until the 17th January 2011.

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Transporting salt across membranes

A dual host approach for co-transporting potassium chloride has been shown to be possible in lipid bilayers, using fluorescence-based transport assays.

Phil Gale and his team from Southampton University (and a collaboration with Kansai University) have shown that the addition of both a cationophore and anionophore can result in a significantly enhanced rate of anion transport through a lipid bilayer membrane.

 

To find out more, download the communication today, which will be free to access until the 17th January 2011. This communication is also part of the ‘Supramolecular Chemistry’ online collection, where Phil Gale (as well as Jonathan Sessler and Jonathan Steed) are guest editors for this web themed issue. 

 

 

 

If you enjoyed reading the ‘Hot’ communication above, you might also be interested in reading Phil Gale’s recent Highlight on “Anion receptor chemistry” (Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 82-86).

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Catalysis and Sensing for Health Symposium

From the 31st of January to the 2nd February 2011 at The University of Bath, University Hall.

CASH will be hosting a civic reception at the Roman Baths on the 1st February (from 7pm onwards) that will be free to all delegates.

 

Catalysis and Sensing for Health (CASH) Symposium is free for delegates from academic and charitable organisations.

Delegates from Industry are requested to contribute a daily registration fee of £40 for a single day or £60 for the whole conference.

For further information on the symposium and/or how to register for the event, then please visit the CASH website.

ChemComm, Chemical Science and Chem Soc Rev Editor, Robert Eagling, will be attending this event so if you would like to arrange a meeting with Robert, please email him at the Editorial Office.

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Hot article round up for November

Whilst most of us are shaking snow from our coats and wearing extra layers in a bid to keep warm this winter, here at the ChemComm Editorial Office we’ve had several hot articles to keep us nice and toasty.

 

From nonporous to nanoporous
Scientists in the US have discovered that a well-known organic host, tris-o-phenylenedioxycyclotriphosphazene,
exists in two polymorphic guest-free forms; a thermodynamic nonporous high-density phase and the kinetic nanoporous low-density phase. To find out more, read the communication published by Jerry Atwood, Praveen Thallapally and their colleagues.

McMurry coupling
Hiroko Yamada and colleagues have made a metal-free and meso-free triphyrin compound via an intramolecular McMurry coupling reaction and used the ligand to form manganese and rhenium complexes. Read more in their communication.

Smart behaviour
Selective adsorption of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) onto patterned gold surfaces has been achieved by scientists in Belgium. Pascal Damman and Philippe Dubois have shown in their communication that pH-induced switching can occur, enabling both controlled positioning and release of CNTs, opening up future development opportunities for CNTs-containing sensing devices

Water-holding MOF
There is much research activity using metal organic frameworks (MOFs) as hosts to a variety of guest molecules. Richard Walton and colleagues have now shown that a flexible MOF, once immersed in water at room temperature, can form a crystalline hydrate and hold the water as a hydrogen-bonded tube. To see this clever research for yourself why not take a closer look at their communication?

Photogenerated holes
Transient absorption spectroscopy has been used to monitor the yield and decay dynamics of photogenerated holes in nanocrystalline hematite photoanodes. To find out what happens in the presence and absence of a positive applied bias you will need to read James Durrant and Michael Gr
ätzel’s communication.

First replication NAND gate
In this communication, Gonen Ashkenasy and colleagues demonstrate the first peptide-based replication system that can be activated by shining light as well as being followed by fluorescence measurements.

Tailor-made mimicry
Thorsten Glaser and his team have designed a new dinucleating ligand system to mimic high-valent oxidation states of oxygen-dependent diiron enzymes. Read more on what they discovered in their communication.

Saccharide chemosensor
Gaku Fukuhara and Yoshihisa Inoue have synthesised a chromophore-modified saccharide chemosensor that can discriminate tetrasaccharide acarbose from 24 different mono-, di-, tri-, and tetrasaccharides. The sensors preferential selectivity for acarbose is pharmaceutically important as it is a drug used to treat diabetes and obesity. To read more, why not download the communication?

Let us know what you think of these articles by blogging some comments below. And if you have your own hot research, then submit to ChemComm today.

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