Author Archive

Three new members named to the NJC Editorial Board

New Journal of Chemistry is proud to welcome three new Board Members. They will take part in the future development of the journal with their colleagues on the board. To get to know them, here is some information about our new members.

 

Dai-Wen Pang from Wuhan University, PR China

Dai-Wen PANG (庞代文) was born in 1961 in Songzi, China. Luojia Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Key Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry for Biology and Medicine at Wuhan University, his research interests focus on the development of new nanobioprobes and nanobioprobe-based methodologies for biomedical research and clinical diagnosis, especially quantum dot-based dynamic biotracking and bioimaging for virus invasion, tumor metastasis and cancer diagnosis. Dai-Wen has over 200 publications in peer-reviewed journals.

 

Dai-Wen earned both his B.S. in Chemistry (1982) and Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry (in 1992, under the direction of Profs. Chuan-Sin CHA and Zong-Li WANG) at the University of Wuhan. Appointed in 2011 as Chief Scientist by the Ministry of Science and Technology of China to work on the Project of National Basic Research Program of China, he will bring to the Board all of his experience and knowledge. Among his various distinctions, Dai-wen received the First Award of the Natural Science Prize of the Ministry of Education of China (2006) and most recently the distinction of National Outstanding Scientist (2012).

 

Dai-Wen’s reaction on accepting his nomination: “It is really my honor to be an NJC Editorial Board member. In my opinion, chemistry should intercross with other disciplines, especially, it should get into life sciences. We chemists should be able to contribute to the fight against diseases such as viruses, cancers and so on. We have great opportunities at the interfaces among chemistry, biology, and nanoscience. I will try my best to promote interdisciplinary study of chemistry with biology, medicine, and nanoscience etc..”

 

Christina Moberg of KTH, Stockholm, Sweden

Christina MOBERG was born in 1947. Full Professor at the KTH School of Chemical Science and Engineering, Organic Chemistry Department in Stockholm since 1997, she obtained her B.Sc. at the University of Stockholm and her Ph.D. at KTH (Royal Institute of Technology) in Stockholm with Prof. Martin Nilsson. Her research interests are centered on asymmetric metal catalysis and concern mainly the development of selective synthetic methods. Christina’s special interests are to determine the role of symmetry in asymmetric reactions and in the design of self-adaptable ligands.

 

Christina has received several awards, such as the “Göran Gustafsson Prize” from the Swedish Academy of Sciences, the “Sixten Heyman Prize” from Gothenburg University and the “Ulla and Stig Holmquist Prize” from Uppsala University; Christina was also awarded the Rosalyn Franklin Lecture tour in Britain in 2005. She has been “knighted” by the French President into the French National Order of Merit in 1999. Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, Christina served as vice-President of the former academy until mid 2011.

 

Christina feels that Board members and play an important role in today’s scientific community: “As the borders between the traditional sub-disciplines of chemistry are becoming less pronounced, a broad-based forum such as the New Journal of Chemistry has an important role to fulfill. As a member of the Editorial Board I will be happy to assist in future development of the journal. Strict adhesion to ethical guidelines is a prerequisite for the promotion of science, and the Board, together with the authors, reviewers, and Editors, should do its best to ensure that strict ethical rules are obeyed.”

 

Sijbren Otto from Groningen University, The Netherlands

Sijbren OTTO was born in Groningen in the Netherlands in 1971. Associate Professor in the Stratingh Institute for Chemistry at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, he received his M.Sc. (1994) and Ph.D. (1998) degrees cum laude from the same university, working in the group of Prof. Jan B. F. N. Engberts. After his Ph.D. he moved to the United States for a year as a postdoctoral researcher in the group of Prof. Steven Regen, investigating synthetic systems mediating ion transport through lipid bilayers. In 1999 he received a Marie Curie Fellowship and moved to the University of Cambridge, where he worked for two years with Prof. Jeremy Sanders on dynamic combinatorial libraries. Sijbren then embarked on an independent research career in Cambridge as a Royal Society University Research Fellow.

 

 

Sijbren moved back to the University of Groningen in 2009 and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2011. His research interests are broad and range from supramolecular chemistry to systems chemistry, embracing topics like catalysis, molecular recognition, self-assembly and self-replication. Sijbren was awarded an ERC starting grant in 2011, a VICI grant in 2013 and currently coordinates a Marie Curie Initial Training Network on Systems Chemistry.

Regarding NJC, Sijbren has these thoughts: “I think it is important to support a general chemistry journal carried by non-profit chemical societies in order to maintain the balance between commercial and non-profit journals. At the same time, it is important to safeguard the quality of such journals at a time of an ever-increasing quantity of manuscripts that are produced throughout the world. “

 

We extend a warm welcome to our three new Board members on behalf of all the actors of the journal! We look forward to collaborating with them in the coming years.

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NJC’s February issue published

c3nj90001kThe front cover this month highlights a collaborative research effort between groups at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in Mumbai, India, and the European School of Chemistry, Polymers and Materials in Strasbourg, France. The groups of Mula and Ziessel have designed novel dyes that show sustainable lasing activity in polar solvents. 

 Design and synthesis of sulfobetainic diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) laser dyes by Soumyaditya Mula, Delphine Hablot, Krishna K. Jagtap, Elodie Heyer and Raymond Ziessel, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 303-308. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40569E 

  

c3nj90002aA novel thermoregulated ionic liquid, used as the recyclable catalyst and co-solvent in a Knoevenagel condensation, is featured on this month’s inside cover. The group of Prof Jun Luo at Nanjing University of Science and Technology used their new system to synthesize substituted benzylidenes with >90 yields in most cases. 

A PEG bridged tertiary amine functionalized ionic liquid exhibiting thermoregulated reversible biphasic behavior with cyclohexane/isopropanol: synthesis and application in Knoevenagel condensation by Jun Luo, Tantan Xin and Yinglei Wang, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 269-273. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40890B 

Check out all 38 articles in this month’s issue here (though you must be a subscriber to read the actual content). 

Don’t miss a single issue of NJC! Sign up for the free E-Alert to get the table of contents in your mailbox each month.

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NJC’s new Associate Editor is from Brazil

  

Jairton Dupont

Prof. Jairton Dupont, NJC's new Associate Editor

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Jairton Dupont as NJC‘s Associate Editor for the Americas. He is a professor of the Institute of Chemistry at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) located in Porte Alegra in Brazil’s southernmost state. He replaces Prof. Michael Scott (formerly at the University of Florida and now at NSF). 

Jaïrton has close ties to France and the UK (NJC‘s two “homes”), having received his Ph.D. degree from the Université Louis Pasteur of Strasbourg (France). After a period as a post-doc at the University of Oxford (UK), he joined the UFRGS, taking up his current position in 1992. His research interests are mainly centered on ionic liquids with special emphasis in catalysis, nanomaterials and alternative energies. Jaïrton has authored well over 200 scientific works, including an organometallic chemistry textbook. 

 Among his various distinctions, Jaïrton is a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences and he has received many awards such as the Humboldt Research Award, the Conrado Wessel Award, the TWAS Award and the Brazilian Gran Cruz. He has returned to the “Old World” on numerous occasions, including as an invited professor at ULP, the University of Nuremberg-Erlangen (Germany) and Universidad de Alcala de Henares and Rovira i Virgili (Spain). Click here to see his CV (in Portuguese).  

Jaïrton’s commitment to excellence in scientific publishing is based on the following: “The worldwide dissemination of scientific achievements relies mostly on periodicals and therefore reputable professional journals are the most significant platform tool in this process. New Journal of Chemistry is certainly one of the platforms for the dissemination of the most important scientific global achievements in chemistry in their whole diversity.”  

I extend a warm welcome to Jaïrton on behalf of the NJC Editorial Board, the editors of NJC, RSC Publishing and the CNRS.  

To submit your work to NJC, click here (or paste this link into your browser: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/njc). 

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Meet Our Authors from the January 2013 Issue of NJC

Prof. George Gokel

Our first author is George Gokel, a former NJC Associate Editor, who is Distinguished Professor of Science and Director of the Center for Nanoscience at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. George’s research is in the field of supramolecular and biological chemistry of membrane active and channel-forming compounds.

The article by George and his co-authors looks into the little-studied branched-chain chemistry of pyrogallolarenes. These compounds have led to at least one remarkable nanotube structure. The group’s NJC paper addresses the membrane behavior of resorcinarenes that have hard-to-obtain, very long chains that are aligned (rccc). The typical synthesis of pyrogallols depends on crystallization of a single product from a complex mixture. Long-chain pyrogallols or resorcinarenes crystallize poorly owing to their extended hydrocarbon chains. Jochen Mattay had previously prepared and characterized very long chain compounds containing varied headgroups. The collaboration with the group of Gokel probed the monolayer behavior (Langmuir trough) and membrane activity (bilayer clamp) to obtain new information about the amphiphilic behavior of these difficult-to-obtain derivatives.

One of George’s favorite films is KPAX. In this film, Kevin Spacey claims to be a tourist from the planet KPAX. Jeff Bridges plays the psychiatrist who seeks conventional explanations for a range of phenomena that point to Spacey’s alien origins. George applies the moral of this film to science: “It humbles one to think that we often try to make our data fit our preconceived notions rather than applying Sherlock Holmes’ advice in the Sign of the Four that ‘when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.'”

Properties of long alkyl-chained resorcin[4]arenes in bilayers and on the Langmuir trough by Priyanka Ogirala, Saeedeh Negin, Ceno Agena, Christian Schäfer, Thomas Geisler, Jochen Mattay and George W. Gokel, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 105–111. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40337D

Luca (on the right) indulging in one of his passions with two friends.

The second NJC board member is Luca Prodi, who is a Full Professor in the Chemistry Department “G. Ciamician” of the University of Bologna.

Luca explains how his research interests have expanded over the years, while remaining centered on light: “I have been always fascinated by luminescence-related processes. Because of this curiosity, I directed my interest to the design of luminescent chemosensors and labels, especially for biological applications. The advent of nanotachnology has allowed the design of brighter systems, and for this reason I have recently started the study of nanoparticles, in particular those possessing a silica core. The possibility to design multicomponent systems opens up a huge number of strategies to improve the analytical signal. It is not possible to get bored studying these materials!”

All of these topics come together in the Focus review contributed by the Prodi group. “The design of chemosensors able to give information about the concentration of a given analyte can have a tremendous impact on many disciplines, such as medical diagnosis, molecular biology, and environmental monitoring, to cite only a few. Since the use of chemosensors based on silica nanoparticles is, to our opinion, very promising for obtaining systems featuring better performances, we have reviewed some interesting examples of what is reported in the literature indicating also some perspectives in the field.”

Reading is one of Luca’s favourite activities besides chemistry (and cyclingsee the photo!). He notes that he is a  “curiosity-driven reader” so his interests span many areas but in particular he likes detective stories by northern Europe writers, while one of his favourite Italian authors is Andrea Camilleri; Luca particularly enjoyed reading the first novel by this author, introducing Inspector Montalbano in La Forma dell’Acqua (The Shape of Water—sounds quite fitting for a chemist!).

Luminescent chemosensors based on silica nanoparticles for the detection of ionic species by Marco Montalti, Enrico Rampazzo, Nelsi Zaccheroni and Luca Prodi, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 28–34. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40673J

David visiting Mgarr in Malta, with a view of the harbor and church.

Lastly let us meet David C. Magri, a recently appointed Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry, University of Malta (Malta is a small archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea, with a long and fascinating history, having been ruled by a succession of powers going from the Phoenicians to the British crown). Getting back to David, his research is in the area of luminescent sensors and molecular logic gates.

In their NJC paper, David with student Thomas report the first examples of molecular AND logic gates that can simultaneously measure the pH and the pE (redox ability of a solution). In honour of Marcel Pourbaix, a formerly renowned electrochemist, they have named them Pourbaix sensors. Such probes could be useful in environmental monitoring, and also in cell biology and medicine, for example, as high concentrations of protons and redox active metal ions, such as iron, have been linked to certain types of cancer.

With a background in both photochemistry and electrochemistry David often contemplated how to intertwine elements from both to the field of molecular information processing.  Fluorescent logic gates for pH and pE was the result.

A book that has left its mark on David from his graduate training is The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. Kuhn (published in 1962 by the University of Chicago Press).  David explains: “The book explores the psychology of science dealing with the acceptance of new paradigms.  I would recommend all researchers give it a read.”

‘Pourbaix sensors’: a new class of fluorescent pE–pH molecular AND logic gates based on photoinduced electron transfer by Thomas J. Farrugia and David C. Magri, New J. Chem., 2013, 37, 148–151. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40732A

We hope you enjoyed meeting some of your fellow chemists. Check back next month on the NJC blog to see who we’ll interview next!

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The last of 2012’s NJC Poster Prize winners

Yang Wang

 Yang Wang, a young Chinese Ph.D. student in the group of Dr Ling Peng at the CINaM in Marseille, won the NJC Poster Prize awarded at the 7th Organic Chemistry Meeting of Marseille. His research interests lie in synthesizing different kinds of dendrimers and their bio-application in drug delivery, especially nucleic acids drug delivery.  

Yang’s winning poster was entitled  “Synthesis of amphiphilic poly(aminoester) dendrimers  for drug delivery”. Poly(aminoester) dendrimers show great promise as biodegradable nanocarriers for drug delivery due to their advantageous properties: biodegradability, potentially lower toxicity and possibility of diverse chemical conjugations. This work presented the design and synthesis of amphiphilic poly(aminoester) dendrimers bearing amine terminal functionalities for effective drug delivery.  

Konstantin Chegaev

 Two NJC poster prizes were awarded at the 6th French-Italian Chemistry Days, also held in Marseille and organized under the auspices of the French Chemical Society (SCF).  

Dr Konstantin Chegaev is a researcher in the group of Prof. Roberta Fruttero, in the Department of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology of the University of Torino. He is focusing his research in the field of anticancer drugs with particular interest to the problem of multi-drug resistance.  

The title of Konstantin’s poster was “Multitarget drugs: NO-donor doxorubicins”. The major result presented in this work is the reversal of multitarget drug resistance in doxorubicin-resistant cell lines. The use of exogenous NO-donor molecules provoke the nitration of tyrosine residue of MDR pumps with consequent increase of doxorubicin accumulation and toxicity in HT29dx cell lines. The authors believe that NO-donor doxorubicins warrant further investigations in preclinical and clinical settings.  

Momar Toure

  

Ph.D. student Momar Toure was the 2nd laureate at this meeting. He is completing his studies in the groups of Jean-Luc Parrain and Olivier Chuzel in the iSm2 laboratory at the University of Aix-Marseille.  

Momar’s poster was on “Self-assembled calixborate macrocyclic anion receptors“. Well-designed macrocyclic calixborates  incorporating imidazolium functinalities were synthesized in high yield. These new macrocycles display a high binding affinity for halides and oxoanions.  

Congratulations to all 3 laureates!
  

A list of all previous NJC Poster Prize winners can be found here.

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NJC at the first ERC Grantees Conference

I attended the first ERC Grantees Conference at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg last month, to hear about the research of recent winners of ERC starting and advanced grants in chemistry. The conference was proposed and organized by two chemists at the Institut Charles Sadron of Strasbourg: Nicolas Giuseppone and Jean-François Lutz.

 

The first two days began with plenary lectures by Jean-Marie Lehn and Ben Feringa, sponsored by Angewandte Chemie (Wiley) and NJC (RSC), respectively. The presentations by 24 grantees of the 2007–2011 grant period were strongly oriented towards complex systems, both chemical and biological.

 

European Research Council officials were also on hand to present the grants program and give an update on what to expect in the coming proposal period.

 

Sightseeing boat in front of the European Parlement.

Conference participants board the sightseeing boat in front of the European Parlement that will take them to the conference dinner.

On Friday evening, a boat ride on the Ill river flowing through the center of Strasbourg took participants to the conference dinner held at the historic Maison Kammerzell, next to the cathedral.

 

The next morning, the younger participants eagerly awaited the announcement of the four poster prizes, provided by three scientific publishers (Nature, Wiley and the RSC for NJC). Dr Yan-Jun Liu, a postdoctoral fellow in the group of Damien Baigl (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) won the NJC prize. Her poster was entitled “High-yield preparation of proteo-liposomes: a synthetic biology approach”.

(more…)

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NJC Poster Prize awarded at Chirality conference

 

Dr Flavia Pop (University Angers)

Dr Flavia Pop

At the recent Journées André Collet de la Chiralité conference, the jury selected Dr Flavia Pop for her poster entitled “Hierarchical Self-Assembly of Chiral C3-Symmetrical Tetrathiafulvalenes”. Flavia, who is now a teaching/research assistant at the University of Angers, carried out this work in the group of Narcis Avarvari in the Moltech Laboratory, in collaboration with the group of David Amabilino in Barcelona and with the contribution of Mathieu Linares at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.

Her winning poster presents compounds of C3 symmetry based on electroactive TTF grafted onto a 1,3,5-tris(amido-2,2’-bipyridine-amido)benzene core. Stereogenic centres attached to the TTF units provide self-assembled homochiral architectures (see Figure 1), like helical aggregates of preferential helicity twist. Different chiral alkyl branches were used (isopentyl, citronellyl and dihydrocitronellyl), leading to the formation of fibres or croissants whose helicity was connected with the nature of the alkyl chain, its stereochemistry and the employed conditions.

 

Self assembly of a TTF-grafted C3 core

Figure 1. Self assembly of a TTF-grafted C3 core

Flavia obtained her Ph.D. degree in 2009 from the Universities of Babes-Bolyai, Cluj-Napoca (Romania) and Angers (France) under the joint supervision of Prof. Ion Grosu and Dr. Jean Roncali. She has continued her research since then at the University of Angers in the field of molecular materials based on electroactive  tetrathiafulvalene as the donor in radical cation salts, covalent donor-acceptor systems and chiral disk-shape molecules.

Congratulations to Flavia for her NJC Poster Prize from the NJC team!


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NJC Poster Prizes at Biodendrimers Symposium

NJC sponsored two poster prizes at the recent 3rd International Symposium on Biological Applications of Dendrimers, held in Toledo, Spain at the beginning of September. Below I present the winners.

Ladies first! Franka Ennen is a 2nd year Ph.D. student in the group of Dietmar Appelhans and Brigitte Voit at the Leibniz Institute for Polymerresearch (IPF) Dresden, Germany. The group is interested in gaining a fundamental understanding of the interactions of natural and synthetic macromolecules such as dendritic glycopolymers or novel proteins for various applications. Franka chose to do her research thesis work at the IPR so as to acquire expertise in various physical/microscopic techniques such as TEM and AFM.

In her poster, “Uptake Behaviour of Oligosaccharide Modified Hyperbranched Poly(ethyleneimine) with Various Watersoluble B-Vitamins” Franka addressed the application of hyperbranched glycopolymers as chromatographic selectors and showed promising first results of oligosaccharide modified poly(ethylene imines) as stationary phases for selective and efficient separation in a chromatographic process, specifically capillary electrochromatography. This work was a collaboration between the IPF and Prof. Dr. Ludmila Anna Kartsova from the State University in St. Petersburg, Russia.

The second winner is Pablo Mesa Antúnez, also a 2nd year graduate student. After a first degree in chemistry and a Masters thesis on luminescent doped silica nanoparticles, Pablo is continuing his studies at the University of Malaga, in the Biomimetic Dendrimers and Photonic Laboratory. His research, supported by an FPI grant from the Spanish government and carried out under the supervision of Ezequiel Perez-Inestrosa, is focused on the development of new dendrimers based on amide bonds and with amine-terminal groups for biomedical applications.

Pablo’s poster on the “Synthesis of New Amine-terminal Dendrimers. The Alternative Henry Approach”, highlights precisely the possibilities given by the Henry approach in the synthesis of dendrimers to obtain different structures and the relatively easy way to obtain the sought-for dendrimer with the azide approach.

The symposium organizers also awarded a poster prize to Rosa M. Reguera, professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences of the Veterinary School of the University of León in Spain, for her poster entitled “Carbosilane Dendrimers as Chemotherapy against Leishmania Parasite”. With her collaborators, Rosa has developed an in vitro high throughput screening system, which is based on genetically engineered Leishmania strains that emit infrared fluorescence in living cells, to test hundreds of potential antileishmanial compounds.

Collaborators include the Immune-Molecular Department headed by Dra. Muñoz-Fernández of General Hospital Gregorio Marañon in Madrid and Drs De La Mata and Gomez of the Inorganic Chemistry Department at the Universidad de Alcalá (Alcalá de Henares, Madrid). In their winning poster, carbosilane dendrimers were used as a drug delivery system to potentiate the therapeutic effect of antileishmanial drugs.

Congratulations to all of the winners for their excellent work, and we wish them continuing success in their research!

3 prize winners with editor and symposium organizer

From left to right: winners Rosa M Reguera (University of León) and Pablo Mesa-Antúnez (University of Malaga), NJC editor Denise Parent (CNRS Montpellier), organizer Rafael Gómez-Ramírez (University of Alcalá) and winner Franka Ennen (IFP Leibniz).

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September issue of NJC is now on-line!

Outside front cover of September 2012 issue of New Journal of ChemistryThe outside front cover of the September 2012 issue of New Journal of Chemistry illustrates the Focus review by Jens Hasserodt (Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, France). This short review presents a strategy to design “off-on” magnetic probes. These ferrous chelates, initially low-spin and diamagnetic, are switched to the paramagnetic “on” state by an external chemical stimulus.

Magnetogenic probes that respond to chemical stimuli in an off–on mode by Jens Hasserodt, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1707-1712. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40209B

Inside front cover of September 2012 issue of New Journal of Chemistry

The inside front cover highlights the work of Shu-Peng Zhang and Hai-Ou Song, academic researchers in Nanjing. In their paper, they report a simple self-assembly technique to make supramolecular hybrid materials of graphene oxide with long-chain alkyl amines. These hybrid materials are easily dispersed in nonpolar organic solvents.

Supramolecular graphene oxide-alkylamine hybrid materials: variation of dispersibility and improvement of thermal stability by Shu-Peng Zhang and Hai-Ou Song, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1733-1738. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40214A

The 28 other Letters and Papers in this issue cover a wide variety of topics: synthetic and physical organic chemistry, materials for catalytic, energy and medical applications, organic & inorganic materials for optoelectronics, physical chemistry, complexes that act as enzyme mimics, thin films, sensors, supramolecular systems, and more.

With this broad coverage of chemistry and neighboring fields, you’re sure to find something of interest! Click here to see the contents of this issue. And why not submit your next paper to NJC?

And so as not to miss a single issue of NJC, sign-up for the FREE Contents List e-mail alert!

We hope you’ll read us again next month!

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Meet Our Authors – August 2012

Barbara Klajnert, an Associate Professor in the Department of General Biophysics of the University of Lodz in Poland, studies the biological properties and medical applications of dendrimers and other nano objects. Her paper reports the first step to investigate the use of sugar modified PPI dendrimers as carriers of anti-leukemic drugs. The authors are seeking to solve the problem of drug resistance and reduce the side effects of chemotherapy. This research is a part of a multi-topic project entitled “Biological properties and biomedical application of dendrimers” operated within the Foundation for Polish Science TEAM program co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund. These researchers seek to use dendrimers’ unique properties in medical applications.
Barbara chose to become a researcher as it was her dream to deal with interdisciplinary subjects. This fits in well with her appreciation of NJC: “I enjoy the diversity of topics that are published in NJC. As an author I appreciate the fast track of publishing papers in this journal.”

Characteristics of complexes between poly(propylene imine) dendrimers and nucleotides by Aleksandra Szulc, Dietmar Appelhans, Brigitte Voit, Maria Bryszewska and Barbara Klajnert, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1610-1615. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40165G

In front of Shitenoji Temple, a very old temple in Tennoji, Osaka City. Of course, I am the middle one between my two sons.

Our next author is Professor Satoshi Shinoda who is in the Department of Chemistry of the Graduate School of Science of Osaka City University (Japan). Saotshi works in the general fields of coordination chemistry and supramolecular chemistry. His contribution to this month’s issue shows that by simply mixing common proteins with a lanthanide salt, they work as near-IR luminescent pH indicators in water. The authors explain that “proteins can be good ligands for lanthanide ions and for sensitizing their luminescence. We tried to use them for biological sensing in aqueous solution.” Satoshi marvels that “Chemistry experiments always gave unpredictable results for me. Even now it does not change.”
 

Ytterbium-substituted transferrin and lactoferrin for near-infrared luminescent pH indication by Satoshi Shinoda, Keiko Terada, Miyuki Eiraku Masaki, Yumiko Kataoka and Hiroshi Tsukube, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1545-1547. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40201G


Assistant Professor Evelina Colacino wished to associate her postdoctoral fellow Yoann Aubin in this profile, as he did all the work! Both are at the University of Montpellier II (France), in the Institut des Biomolécules Max Mousseron (IBMM). Evelina and Yoann seek to develop new methodologies in asymmetric synthesis, green processes and catalysis using alternative solvents, with an emphasis on the design and synthesis of biologically important molecules such as peptides, nucleosides (-tides), terpenes and heterocyclic compounds.

Their NJC paper report a serendipitous discovery: an unprecedented directed oxidative cross-coupling of sulfahydantoins with aldehydes via a radical sulfonate–sulfinate conversion. N-Boc protected sulfahydantoins react in the presence of an aldehyde, leading to the aldolisation product. However, upon replacing the N-Boc group by a methanesulfonyl the unexpected aspartate semialdehyde derivative was unequivocally observed. The assembly of two carbonyl subunits by their alpha-carbon, which is undocumented to date, afforded 1,4-carbonyl derivatives through a direct oxidative cross-coupling reaction. Optimization of this new methodology will lead to a source of original peptidomimetic scaffolds with two new contiguous stereocenters, including a quaternary center.
In deciding to become a chemist, the critical question to be answered was ‘What type of chemist you want to be?’ Evelina and Yoann have chosen to work in the academic arena “for the freedom we have in developing our ideas and conducting the research we are mainly interested in. All chemists are artists for their creativity and inspiration. for their ability to study the matter, to manipulate it in order to materialize their  ideas in a masterpiece (a molecule, as for a painting or a sculpture…).
Their opinion of NJC is that as it covers different areas in chemistry, it is a multidisciplinary journal for scientists wishing to enlarge their knowledge beyond their own research field.

Unprecedented directed oxidative cross-coupling of sulfahydantoins with aldehydes via a radical sulfonate–sulfinate conversion by Yoann Aubin, Evelina Colacino, Djamel Bouchouk, Isabelle Chataigner, María del Mar Sánchez, Jean Martinez and Georges Dewynter, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1560-1563. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40294G


Next we meet Christoph Janiak, who is full professor of bioinorganic chemistry and catalysis at the Heinrich Heine University of Düsseldorf in Germany. His research interest range from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), coordination polymers, chirality, supramolecular interactions and crystal engineering to metal nanoparticles: their synthesis and use in catalysis or in ionic liquids.
Christoph’s paper addresses the use of non-covalent interactions for the organization and separation of hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions as in the formation of monolayers, micelles, bilayers (in membranes) or liposomes from molecules with a polar head and a non-polar tail—a process which is highly relevant in nature. The chiral amino alcohols used in this project were initially simply intended to be easily accessible chiral synthons for the synthesis of chiral coordination networks. However, their interest has expanded beyond this simple use.
Christoph’s vocation for chemistry began in high school. “Pretty much from the first chemistry lesson from my chemistry teacher back then got me hooked on the subject. After a few weeks of high school chemistry I already decided that this is what I would want to do as a profession.” (Lucky Christoph to have had such an inspiring teacher!)
“I like the broad scope of NJC. I often find articles which combine synthesis with interesting ideas and “applications”, without being flashy and exaggerating. I am also happy that the journal seems to be well read and gives my articles visibility. (A perspective which I published in 2010 in NJC has already been cited 126 times by now.)”

Hydrophobic-exterior layer structures and magnetic properties of trinuclear copper complexes with chiral amino alcoholate ligands by Jana K. Maclaren, Joaquín Sanchiz, Pedro Gili and Christoph Janiak, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1596-1609. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40063D


Frédéric-Georges Fontaine
is an Associate Professeur in the Chemistry Department, Université Laval (Quebec City, Canada), in the Centre sur les propriétés des surfaces et de la catalyse (CERPIC).
“We are globally interested in the development of green catalysts for small molecule functionalization and in the synthesis and reaction of transition metal complexes having group XIII ambiphilic ligands. Several groups are interested in supporting ruthenium asymmetric hydrogenation catalysts to limit the presence of toxic metals in synthetic drugs. (In this work) we have shown that chitosan is not only an interesting catalyst support, but also that the natural chirality of the biopolymer can be used for stereoselection in the hydrogenation of prochiral substrates.”
This research arose from a collaboration between the Fontaine research group, interested in catalysts development, and a colleague at the Université du Québec in Rimouski who is interested in the properties of chitosan. “It seemed like a natural match.”
Frédéric had to decide between becoming an architect or a chemist. Both disciplines require a lot of creativity and involve the building of novel architectures. “It took me only few days in an architecture major program to realize that I did not have the drawing skills needed to become an architect and that I was missing the science” notes Frédéric to explain how chemistry won out.

Homogeneous asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of ketones using a ruthenium catalyst anchored on chitosan: natural chirality at work by Mathieu Babin, Roxanne Clément, Jonathan Gagnon and Frédéric-Georges Fontaine, New J. Chem., 2012, 36, 1548-1551. DOI: 10.1039/C2NJ40175D

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