Archive for November, 2013

Meet Our Authors – November Issue 2013

by Ling PENG, NJC Assistant Editor

Here is a selection of author profiles from the 2013 November issue of NJC. We thank them most warmly for accepting our invitation and having kindly taken their time to answer a few questions for us.


Our first author is Dr. Jean-Pierre Majoral, who is currently an emerita Research Director of exceptional grade in CNRS. He is interested in all aspects of dendrimer properties and applications from biology to medicinal chemistry, material sciences and catalysis. His contribution to this issue is a concise review which presents not only the “state of the art” concerning the use of dendrimers as tools to tackle different aggressive types of cancers (from colon to brain ) but also to point out what should be (or will be) done using dendrimers to face important remaining challenges encountered by medicinal chemists. “It is difficult for me to imagine a different career than the one I had and currently I have!” says Jean-Pierre with a total satisfaction working as a researcher during all a career.  
Prof. Larry Que is a Regents Professor of Chemistry at University of Minnesota, and focuses mainly on bioinorganic chemistry. In this issue, he contributed a paper entitled “Cyclohexene as a versatile substrate probe for the nature of the high-valent iron-oxo oxidant in bio-inspired nonheme iron-catalyzed oxidations”.  “I love discovering new, unusually reactive compounds and understanding how they work. I also enjoy training young scientists very much” claimed Prof Que.  
Prof. Michio Yamada is an Assistant Professor at Tokyo Gakugei University. He is interested in the chemistry of carbon-rich architectures such as fullerenes, carbon nanotubes, and acetylene scaffolds. Currently, he is pursuing the structure-based design and synthesis of novel molecular receptors to explore the supramolecular chemistry of nanocarbons. In his contribution to this issue, he reported a new method for functionalization of fullerenes using photolabelling reagents. “If I couldn’t be a chemist, I’d be a curator in a museum of natural history. Actually I spent a lot of time in museums with my parents in my childhood and the experience was valuable and unforgettable”, says Prof. Yamada.  
Prof. Clotilde Policar is specialized in bio-inorganic chemistry and cellular inorganic chemistry and working at Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She contributed an article entitled “An Intrinsically Fluorescent Glycoligand for Direct Imaging of Ligand Trafficking in Artificial and Living Cell Systems” in the October issue of NJC.  For her, the most exciting moment is “when a difficulty vanishes, at any level; from a simple technical problem solved to a deeper understanding of a phenomenon. It can be after a long process or in a short moment of insight. It is always enlightening and produces a deep joy and emotion that is, to me, the quintessence of research.”  

Read November’s issue now.

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Andre Cobb named to NJC Board

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Dr Andre Cobb to New Journal of Chemistry‘s International Advisory Board.

Alexander John Andre Cobb chemistAndre is an Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Reading. He graduated from King’s College London in 1997 and moved to UCL to conduct his Ph.D. research with Professor Charles Marson on the design of new asymmetric catalytic processes. From there he moved to Cambridge to undertake postdoctoral research, first with Dr Florian Hollfelder in the Biochemistry Department, working on the development of synthetic enzymes, and then with Professor Steve Ley in the Chemistry Department in the areas of medicinal chemistry and asymmetric methodology.

In 2005, Andre moved to a faculty position at the University of Reading where he investigates new methods in the synthesis of biologically relevant molecules—particularly unnatural amino acids. He was awarded a university prize for Best Research Output in 2010, and a Thieme Chemistry Journals award in 2011. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2012.

As a member of the Editorial Board, Andre is interested in using social media to promote NJC. We welcome Andre and look forward to the first tweet!

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NJC Issue 11 online – in honour of Bernard Meunier

NJC  is delighted to announce that NJC issue 11 is available online.

This month’s issue features 27 contributions dedicated to Bernard Meunier, on the occasion of his official retirement from the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) in France.

This collection includes high quality articles on a diverse range of topics, including molecular chemistry, dendrimers, nanostructures, organometallic chemistry and catalysis. The issue was guest edited by Azzedine Bousseksou and Jean-Pierre Majoral (CNRS, Toulouse, France). You can read the Editorial to find out more.

In addition to the 44 Full papers and 9 Letters covering a different area of research, issue 11 contains 1 Focus and 3 Perspectives reviews – these review articles are free to access for 4 weeks.

 

Focus

Nanoparticles of molecule-based conductors
Dominique de Caro, Lydie Valade, Christophe Faulmann, Kane Jacob, Diane Van Dorsselaer, Imane Chtioui, Lionel Salmon, Abdelaziz Sabbar, Souad El Hajjaji, Emile Pérez, Sophie Franceschi and Jordi Fraxedas, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00555K

Perspectives

Dendrimers as macromolecular tools to tackle from colon to brain tumor types: a concise overview
Serge Mignani and Jean-Pierre Majoral, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 3337;
DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00300K

Positively charged phosphorus dendrimers. An overview of their properties
Anne-Marie Caminade and Jean-Pierre Majoral, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00583F

Organometallic approach for the synthesis of nanostructures
Catherine Amiens, Bruno Chaudret, Diana Ciuculescu-Pradines, Vincent Collière, Katia Fajerwerg, Pierre Fau, Myrtil Kahn, André Maisonnat, Katerina Soulantica and Karine Philippot, DOI: 10.1039/C3NJ00650F

 

We hope that you will find NJC issue 11 fun and thought-provoking!


Go to the issue now…

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