Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Gold-peptide conjugates to target cancer cells

Scientists in Germany have prepared gold conjugates with mitochondria-localising peptides. Using these conjugates, the team studied the mechanism of action of gold-based anti-cancer drug candidates.

The team showed that the conjugates were able to break resistance against the commonly used anti-cancer drug cisplatin in p53 mutant cells lines.

Link to journal article
A Spontaneous Gold(I)-Azide Alkyne Cycloaddition Reaction Yields Gold-Peptide Bioconjugates which Overcome Cisplatin Resistance in a p53-Mutant Cancer Cell Line

S D Koster et al
Chem. Sci.,
2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc01127a

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A new direction in MOF chemistry

US scientists have used inorganic nodes in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as chelating ligand platforms for unusual coordination chemistry; using a MOF’s secondary building units for coordination chemistry is virtually unexplored.

They used the Zn4O secondary building units of the well known MOF-5 (Zn4O(1,4-benzenedicarboxylate)3) as tripodal chelating ligands and kinetically trapped a Ni2+ ion in an unusual tetrahedral all-oxygen ligand field. In doing so, they also demonstrated that MOFs can serve as veritable platforms for synthesising inorganic clusters (i.e. a NiZn3O(carboxylate)6 unit) that have no analogues in molecular chemistry.

Link to journal article
Lattice-Imposed Geometry in Metal-Organic Frameworks: Lacunary Zn4O Clusters in MOF-5 Serve as Tripodal Chelating Ligands for Ni2+
C K Brozek and M Dinca
Chem. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc20306e

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Efficient release of platinum anticancer drug

Carbon-based drug delivery vehicles such as carbon ‘nano-needles’ have the potential to eliminate the severe side-effects caused by platinum anticancer drugs, but scientists have found it difficult to control the drug’s containment and release. Cisplatin is hydrophilic so trying to contain it within a nanotube’s hydrophobic interior is difficult – the drug readily gets replaced with water. Conversely, strongly hydrophobic-hydrophobic interactions between a drug and the nanotube may prevent the drug’s efficient release.

Scientists from Singapore have trapped a strongly hydrophobic Pt(IV) prodrug in carbon nanotubes and have shown that chemical reduction causes a dramatic reversal in hydrophobicity to release the active Pt(II) complex.

Efficient release of platinum anticancer drug

Link to journal article
Platinum(IV) prodrugs entrapped within multiwalled carbon nanotubes: Selective release by chemical reduction and hydrophobicity reversal
J Li et al
Chem. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc01086k

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Nanorods support metal nanoparticle catalysts for high stability and activity

Scientists in Germany have made a new mesoporous material (carbon nitride nanorods) that can chaperone metal nanoparticles. The hybrid nanorods are catalytic and were shown to successively trigger water reduction to form hydrogen then activation of the hydrogen to reduce nitrophenol. The nanorods could potentially be used as a matrix for other nanoparticles, leading to a variety of applications.

 

Nanorods support metal nanoparticle catalysts

Link to journal article
Mesoporous g-C3N4 nanorods as multifunctional supports of ultrafine metal nanoparticles: hydrogen generation from water and reduction of nitrophenol with tandem catalysis in one step

X-H Li, X Wang and M Antonietti
Chem. Sci.
,2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc20289a

 

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New catalysts green up industrial process

Scientists in Australia, China and Canada have made new photocatalysts that, in the presence of sunlight, can oxidise stable compounds such as toluene using oxygen at room temperature. Oxidation of toluene to commercial chemicals is a major industrial process, but it is conducted under high temperatures and oxygen pressures, or requires recovery of homogeneous cobalt catalysts.

The new photocatalysts work via a mechanism that is different from those of any known photocatalysts: the surface complexes are anchored on the surface of metal hydroxides by chemical bonds and can absorb light generating free radicals on the surface. These then initiate aerobic oxidation of the stable alkyl aromatic molecules. So, they can use sunlight to drive the production of fine organic chemicals in an efficient, green and chemoselective manner.

Link to journal article
Driving Selective Aerobic Oxidation of Alkyl Aromatics by Sunlight on Alcohol Grafted Metal Hydroxides
S Sarina et al
Chem. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc20114c

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Supramolecular gels as logic gates

Systems chemistry focuses on achieving controllable outputs from the interactions and reactions of a mixture of chemical components. In this way, researchers hope to mimic biological systems, which utilise highly complex series of interconnected signalling processes and feedback loops to respond to a wide range of external stimuli.

Christoph Schalley’s group in Berlin have reported a fascinating example of supramoleular systems chemistry, using a range of non-covalent interactions and self assembly properties of a simple bis-urea starting molecule. Like many bis-ureas, 1 was found to form an organogel due to hydrogen bonding interactions between the urea groups on adjacent molecules. Disrupting these interactions reverses the gel formation, leaving a sol phase. In this case, the authors found three different chemical input signals to switch the gel to a sol: adding chloride anions to hydrogen bond to the urea groups, adding potassium cations to bind within the crown ether groups, and by adding the ammonium threads 2 (2 equivalents) or 3 (1 equivalent) to form a rotaxane.

Each of these binding processes can also be reversed by chemically removing the guest, regenerating the gel phase. Silver cations were used to precipitate the chloride, a cryptand was added to tightly bind to the potassium, and the rotaxane threads were deprotonated using a base. In this way, a large number of input signals were used to yield a controllable and observable chemical property. These processes were used to construct various logic gates, in which a logic output (the formation or dissolution of a gel phase) resulted from one or more logic inputs (the addition of one or more of the above reagents).

This work uses host guest chemistry to produce real-world, observable results from a large number of chemical input signals. It is an inspiring example of how simple binding processes can be incorporated into complex sequences and systems. You can download the full article here.

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First efficient catalyst to synthesise hindered heterobiaryls by direct C–H coupling

Scientists in Japan and Germany have made the first efficient catalyst to enable the synthesis of hindered heterobiaryls by direct C–H coupling.  Hindered biaryls have numerous applications such as catalysts/ligands for asymmetric synthesis and chiral materials, and are often found in biologically active natural products.

Link to journal article
Hindered Biaryls by C-H Coupling: Bisoxazoline-Pd Catalysis Leading to Enantioselective C-H Coupling
K Yamaguchi et al
Chem. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc20277h

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First coordination polymer-based devices

Scientists in Spain and Italy have used simple and cheap wet lithography to generate highly electrical conductive structures located upon demand on technologically relevant surfaces. The team tested the materials as electrodes in organic field‐effect transistor devices and they say it opens the way to a broad range of potential applications, such as molecular sensors.

 

Link to journal article
Patterned conductive nanostructures from reversible self-assemble of 1D coordination polymer

D Gentili et al
Chem. Sci.,
2012, DOI: 10.1039/c2sc00029f

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Molecular recognition and modern physical organic chemistry – free articles!

Chemical Science and ChemComm are sponsoring the symposium on Playing Ball: Molecular Recognition and Modern Physical Organic Chemistry in honour of Professor Julius Rebek Jr at the spring ACS meeting. To celebrate, we’re giving free access to some recent articles from Professor Rebek and the symposium speakers until 1st April.

Why don’t you have a read and let us know what you think?

Encapsulation of the uranyl dication
Stephan Beer, Orion B. Berryman, Dariush Ajami and Julius Rebek Jr., Chem. Sci., 2010, 1, 43-47

Shape-shifting in contorted dibenzotetrathienocoronenes
Chien-Yang Chiu, Bumjung Kim, Alon A. Gorodetsky, Wesley Sattler, Sujun Wei, Aaron Sattler, Michael Steigerwald and Colin Nuckolls, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 1480-1486

Gas-phase H/D-exchange reactions on resorcinarene and pyrogallarene capsules: Proton transport through a one-dimensional Grotthuss mechanism
Henrik D. F. Winkler, Egor V. Dzyuba, Julian A. W. Sklorz, N. Kodiah Beyeh, Kari Rissanen and Christoph A. Schalley, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 615-624

A dissymmetric molecular capsule with polar interior and two mechanically locked hemispheres
Marcos Chas and Pablo Ballester, Chem. Sci., 2012, 3, 186-191

A benzocrown-6-calix[4]arene methacrylate copolymer: Selective extraction of caesium ions from a multi-component system
Brett M. Rambo, Sung Kuk Kim, Jong Seung Kim, Christopher W. Bielawski and Jonathan L. Sessler, Chem. Sci., 2010, 1, 716-722

Cell surface-based differentiation of cell types and cancer states using a gold nanoparticle-GFP based sensing array
Avinash Bajaj, Subinoy Rana, Oscar R. Miranda, Joseph C. Yawe, D. Joseph Jerry, Uwe H. F. Bunz and Vincent M. Rotello, Chem. Sci., 2010, 1, 134-138

Donor-substituted octacyano[4]dendralenes: a new class of cyano-rich non-planar organic acceptors
Benjamin Breiten, Yi-Lin Wu, Peter D. Jarowski, Jean-Paul Gisselbrecht, Corinne Boudon, Markus Griesser, Christine Onitsch, Georg Gescheidt, W. Bernd Schweizer, Nicolle Langer, Christian Lennartz and François Diederich, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 88-93

A transparent photo-responsive organogel based on a glycoluril supergelator
Konrad Tiefenbacher, Henry Dube, Dariush Ajami and Julius Rebek, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 7341-7343

Recent advances in hydrogen-bonded hexameric encapsulation complexes
Liat Avram, Yoram Cohen and Julius Rebek Jr., Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 5368-5375

A light controlled cavitand wall regulates guest binding
Orion B. Berryman, Aaron C. Sather and Julius Rebek Jr., Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 656-658

Thermodynamically controlled self-sorting of hetero-bimetallic metallo-supramolecular macrocycles: what a difference a methylene group makes!
Boris Brusilowskij, Egor V. Dzyuba, Ralf W. Troff and Christoph A. Schalley, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 1830-1832

Anion-dependent fluorescence in bis(anilinoethynyl)pyridine derivatives: switchable ON–OFF and OFF–ON responses
Calden N. Carroll, Brian A. Coombs, Sean P. McClintock, Charles A. Johnson II, Orion B. Berryman, Darren W. Johnson and Michael M. Haley, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 5539-5541

Sodium and pH responsive hydrogel formation by the supramolecular system calix[4]pyrrole derivative/tetramethylammonium cation
Begoña Verdejo, Francisco Rodríguez-Llansola, Beatriu Escuder, Juan F. Miravet and Pablo Ballester, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 2017-2019

Conformational and spectroscopic properties of π-extended, bipyrrole-fused rubyrin and sapphyrin derivatives
Se-Young Kee, Jong Min Lim, Soo-Jin Kim, Jaeduk Yoo, Jung-Su Park, Tridib Sarma, Vincent M. Lynch, Pradeepta K. Panda, Jonathan L. Sessler, Dongho Kim and Chang-Hee Lee, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 6813-6815

Just add tetrazole: 5-(2-Pyrrolo)tetrazoles are simple, highly potent anion recognition elements
Rebecca J. M. Courtemanche, Thomas Pinter and Fraser Hof, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 12688-12690

Synthesis of cationic quantum dots via a two-step ligand exchange process
Yi-Cheun Yeh, Debabrata Patra, Bo Yan, Krishnendu Saha, Oscar R. Miranda, Chae Kyu Kim and Vincent M. Rotello, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 3069-3071

Expanding the chemical space for push-pull chromophores by non-concerted [2+2] and [4+2] cycloadditions: access to a highly functionalised 6,6-dicyanopentafulvene with an intense, low-energy charge-transfer band
Govindasamy Jayamurugan, Jean-Paul Gisselbrecht, Corinne Boudon, Franziska Schoenebeck, W. Bernd Schweizer, Bruno Bernet and François Diederich, Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 4520-4522

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Stimuli-Responsive Supramolecular Assemblies – free content for a limited period

Chemical Science and ChemComm are delighted to be sponsoring the New Frontiers in Stimuli-Responsive Supramolecular Assemblies symposium at the ACS spring meeting in San Diego.

To celebrate this fantastic symposium, Chemical Science is giving free access to some recent articles from a selection of the symposium’s guest speakers. Why not check out why they choose to publish with Chemical Science?

Cell surface-based differentiation of cell types and cancer states using a gold nanoparticle-GFP based sensing array
Avinash Bajaj, Subinoy Rana, Oscar R. Miranda, Joseph C. Yawe, D. Joseph Jerry, Uwe H. F. Bunz and Vincent M. Rotello, Chem. Sci., 2010, 1, 134-138

Cylindrical micelles from the living crystallization-driven self-assembly of poly(lactide)-containing block copolymers
Nikos Petzetakis, Andrew P. Dove and Rachel K. O’Reilly, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 955-960

A programmable transducer self-assembled from DNA
Banani Chakraborty, Natasha Jonoska and Nadrian C. Seeman, Chem. Sci., 2012, 3, 168-176

A mechanistic study of Lewis acid-catalyzed covalent organic framework formation
Eric L. Spitler, Marissa R. Giovino, Sarah L. White and William R. Dichtel, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 1588-1593

Cell-compatible, integrin-targeted cryptophane-129Xe NMR biosensors
Garry K. Seward, Yubin Bai, Najat S. Khan and Ivan J. Dmochowski, Chem. Sci., 2011, 2, 1103-1110

This content will be free to access until 1st April.

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