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10 Aug 2017

Scott, Fox and Gibson develop 'metallohelical antifreezes'

A collaboration between the , and groups has been published in the. The team were inspired by how small helical antifreeze proteins in Nature enable extreomophiles to survive low temperatures, where other species would not survive. Rather than using traditional peptide/protein chemistry, the team used self-assembled metallohelicates which have similar dimensions to a small alpha helix, and found some which were remarkably potent at stopping ice crystal growth ; a major technological challenge in applications from wind farms, to aircraft to cryopreservation. Modelling studies showed that the underlying activity could be linked the patches of hydrophobicity (water liking) and hydrophobicity (water hating).

Read the paper here

10 Jul 2017

Congratulations Eleni Bitziou

Congratulations to Eleni Bitziou and her family on the arrival of their baby daughter Lydia.

04 Jul 2017

Joy Montgomery's Raleigh adventure featured in Woman and Home

Joy Montgomery has been featured in this months Woman & Home magazine following her recent charity expedition to Borneo.

19 Jun 2017

Congratulations to Selina Kermode on the birth of her baby boy.

Congratulations to Selina Kermode and her husband on the birth of their baby boy Adam Richard Kermode. Adam was born on the 6th June 2017. We wish them all the very best.

06 Jun 2017

Congratulations to Pat Unwin who is to be awarded the Charles N. Reilley Award by SEAC.

Pat Unwin has been selected by the Society of Electroanalytical Chemistry to receive the 2018 Charles N. Reilley Award. The Award recognizes outstanding research contributions in electroanalytical chemistry and will be presented at a special symposium at Pittcon in Orlando in February next year.

Pat will be the 35th winner of the Award and the first person from the UK to receive it. The Award is given in memory of the renowned US analytical chemist Charles N. Reilley and celebrates scientists whose work advances fundamental understanding in electroanalytical science over empiricism.

Pat’s group has made spectacular advances in instrumental electrochemistry in the past few years, developing innovative electrochemical imaging probes to visualise interfacial dynamic processes of wide applicability, from electrocatalysts to living cells.

02 Jun 2017
17 May 2017

Professor Greg Challis wins prestigious Royal Society of Chemistry prize

Congratulations to Professor Greg Challis who is the Royal Society of Chemistry Interdisciplinary Prize winner for 2017.

http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/newsandevents/pressreleases/warwick_chemist_wins

19 Apr 2017

糖心TV polymers in NASA-funded launch to high altitude

For the full press release see:

 

Tags: news
19 Apr 2017

Supramolecular Photoactivatable Anticancer Hydrogels

Newton Fellow V. Venkatesh and co-workers from the Sadler group just published their work on a new way to deliver photoactivatable anticancer drugs by incorporation into hydrogels.

The group’s ongoing efforts might prove to be seminal for the development of metal-based photoactivatable topical agents for the treatment of lung, oesophageal and other accessible cancers.

Tags: news
06 Apr 2017

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06 Apr 2017

GibsonGroup Science heads to Space!

On Saturday morning (east cost US time, Saturday night in UK), a team of students from Edgecombe Community College (Carolina, USA), in collaboration with NASA and NC space grant, will launch a student-lead high altitude baloon, including an experiment based on the innovative cryopreservation science.

The balloon will be launched to 60 to 100,000 feet, so high that the curvature of the Earth will be clearly visible. It will contain experiments to track movement, altitude humitity and more, but also 1 additional science experiment. The students, lead by Jillian Leary approached to ask if the GibsonGroup's unique ice-growth inhibiting polymers, inspired by Natures antifreeze proteins, could be included as an experiment to see how cells respond to the harsh high-altitude envirnoments. The polymers are design to stop ice crystals growing, and enables cells, which would otherwise need large volumes of toxic solvents to survive being frozen and stressed. This technology has the potential to revolutionise regenerative and transplantation medicine.

The launch will be streamed live on facebook

Read more here

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