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Showing posts from October, 2016

Eleutherobin

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The generosity of mother nature is limitless and it will not stop giving for humankind to thrive. Besides that, nature has been a close friend with chemists especially organic chemists. Complex structures of natural products have been a great interest as it provides to develop synthetic methods to synthesise natural products. One of the 'hunting grounds' of synthetic organic chemists is the sea, and one of the products is called eleutherobin, 1 . Eleutherobin can be isolated form a species of marine soft corals Eleutherobia  collected in the Indian Ocean near Bennett's Shoal in Western Australia. Despite its rarity, eleutherobin is a potent compound against selected breast, renal, ovarian, and lung cancer cells. This highly potential compound drove Nicolaou's group to synthesise this compound.

Four-Wheel Drive in Molecular Level

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Machinery has propelled human civilisation into another level by helping us to perform tasks beyond our capability. In decades, human has made different type of machines with various of sizes; from enormous machine into molecular-size machinery. The ideas of molecular-size machinery are inspired from the nature in the cellular level such as ATP synthase motor and kinesin transporter. ATP synthase motor (right, J. Weber, Nat. Chem. Biol. , 2010, 6 , 794-795) and Feringa's nanocar (left, ©Johan Jarnestad/The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences) One of the prominent examples of the molecular machines is Feringa's nanocar  where the molecule is propelled by four rotating molecular motors.

Bending It Further: Porphyrin Nanotube

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The synthesis of supramolecules has become an intense interest in the recent years, especially conjugated π-system. In the previous post , a cyclic octamer of porphyrin was synthesised and it gives optical interesting properties. Increasing its dimensionality, such as into barrel-like structure, could enhance electronic delocalisation and perhaps leading to exotic properties such as Aharonov-Bohm oscillation. This property has been observed in single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs) but it hasn't yet been detected in molecular materials, so this gives motivation for synthetic chemist to synthesise the molecular SWNT to observe this exotic property. Anderson's group from Oxford University successfully synthesised porphyrin tube 1  which consists of 12 porphyrins, each of which is directly conjugated to its three neighbours.

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2016

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The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences  has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2016 to \ Jean-Pierre Sauvage (University of Strasbourg, France) Sir J. Fraser Stoddart (Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA) Bernard L. Feringa (University of Groningen, the Netherlands) "for the design and synthesis of molecular machines"