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Dive into the research topics where Andrew J. Sutherland is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Sutherland.


Current Opinion in Solid State & Materials Science | 2002

Quantum dots as luminescent probes in biological systems

Andrew J. Sutherland

This review describes the recent progress made in exploiting the light emitting properties of quantum dots as luminescent probes for the investigation of non-covalent interactions between two or more biological molecules. The properties of quantum dots and conventional fluorescent probes are compared and methods for attaching quantum dots to biomolecules examined. Such attachment generally involves two stages: quantum dot capping/coating and subsequent covalent or non-covalent linkage to the biomolecule of interest. Both are addressed. Finally, the use of quantum dots in biological assays is exemplified and the future roles of quantum dots discussed.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2005

Synthesis and characterization of CdS quantum dots in polystyrene microbeads

Yang Li; Eric Chun Yeung Liu; Nigel Pickett; Peter J. Skabara; Siobhan Cummins; Stephen Ryley; Andrew J. Sutherland; Paul O'Brien

Polystyrene microbeads doped with highly luminescent CdS quantum dots (QDs) have been prepared. Polystyrene particles with diameters ranging from 100 nm to 500 µm were prepared by a suspension polymerization method and with different loadings of QDs. The resulting organic–inorganic microspheres have been characterized by FTIR, elemental analysis and SEM. Confocal microscopy and photoluminescence studies proved that the CdS nanoparticles were evenly distributed throughout the polystyrene spheres. The QD-containing composites have similar optical properties to isolated CdS QDs. The thermal decomposition of the hybrid materials occurred at higher temperature than for the parent organic materials.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Removing the redundancy from randomised gene libraries

Marcus D. Hughes; David A. Nagel; Albert Francis Santos; Andrew J. Sutherland; Anna V. Hine

Amino acid substitution plays a vital role in both the molecular engineering of proteins and analysis of structure-activity relationships. High-throughput substitution is achieved by codon randomisation, which generates a library of mutants (a randomised gene library) in a single experiment. For full randomisation, key codons are typically replaced with NNN (64 sequences) or NN(G)(CorT) (32 sequences). This obligates cloning of redundant codons alongside those required to encode the 20 amino acids. As the number of randomised codons increases, there is therefore a progressive loss of randomisation efficiency; the number of genes required per protein rises exponentially. The redundant codons cause amino acids to be represented unevenly; for example, methionine is encoded just once within NNN, whilst arginine is encoded six times. Finally, the organisation of the genetic code makes it impossible to encode functional subsets of amino acids (e.g. polar residues only) in a single experiment. Here, we present a novel solution to randomisation where genetic redundancy is eliminated; the number of different genes equals the number of encoded proteins, regardless of codon number. There is no inherent amino acid bias and any required subset of amino acids may be encoded in one experiment. This generic approach should be widely applicable in studies involving randomisation of proteins.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2003

A facile route to a polymer-supported IBX reagent

Z. Lei; C. Denecker; S. Jegasothy; David C. Sherrington; N.K.H. Slater; Andrew J. Sutherland

A three-step preparation of a polymer-supported IBX reagent from poly(p-methylstyrene) is reported. This reagent has been used successfully for the efficient oxidation of a series of alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes.


Chemical Communications | 2003

Quantum dot-labelled polymer beads by suspension polymerisation

Paul O'Brien; Siobhan Cummins; Dan Darcy; Angela L. Dearden; Ombretta Masala; Nigel Pickett; Steve Ryley; Andrew J. Sutherland

CdSe quantum dots with polymerisable ligands have been incorporated into polystyrene beads, via a suspension polymerisation reaction, as a first step towards the optical encoding of solid supports for application in solid phase organic chemistry.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2014

Polymerisable octahedral rhenium cluster complexes as precursors for photo/electroluminescent polymers

Olga A. Efremova; Konstantin A. Brylev; Olena Kozlova; Matthew S. White; Michael A. Shestopalov; Noboru Kitamura; Yuri V. Mironov; Siegfried Bauer; Andrew J. Sutherland

New polymerisable photoluminescent octahedral rhenium cluster complexes trans-[{Re6Q8}(TBP)4(VB)2] (Q = S or Se; TBP-p-tert-butylpyridine; VB-vinyl benzoate) have been synthesised, characterised and used to construct rhenium cluster-organic polymer hybrid materials. These novel polymer systems are solution-processable and the rhenium clusters retain their photoluminescent properties within the polymer environment. Notably, when the rhenium cluster complexes are incorporated into the matrix of the electroluminescent polymer poly(N-vinylcarbazole), the resultant cluster polymer hybrid combined properties of both components and was used successfully in the construction of a polymer light emitting diode (PLED). These prototype devices are the first PLEDs to incorporate octahedral rhenium clusters and provide the first direct evidence of the electroluminescent properties of rhenium clusters and indeed, to the best of our knowledge, of any member of the family of 24-electron hexanuclear cluster complexes of molybdenum, tungsten or rhenium.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2016

Photoluminescent materials based on PMMA and a highly-emissive octahedral molybdenum metal cluster complex

Olga A. Efremova; Konstantin A. Brylev; Yuri A. Vorotnikov; Lucie Vejsadová; Michael A. Shestopalov; Gwendolen F. Chimonides; Petr Mikes; Paul D. Topham; Sung-Jin Kim; Noboru Kitamura; Andrew J. Sutherland

Materials that combine photoluminescence, optical transparency and facile processability are of high importance in many applications. This article reports on the development of photoluminescent poly(methyl methacrylate) materials based on novel highly emissive anionic molybdenum cluster complex [{Mo6I8}(OTs)6]2- (where OTs- is the p-toluenesulfonate ion). The materials were obtained by both solution and bulk copolymerisation of methyl methacrylate and (dMDAEMA)2[{Mo6I8}(OTs)6], where dMDAEMA+ is the polymerisable cation [2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl]dimethyl-dodecylammonium. Evaluation of the resultant hybrid materials showed that one could combine the excellent photoluminescent properties of the cluster complex with the transparency and processability of PMMA.


Dalton Transactions | 2016

Octahedral molybdenum cluster complexes with aromatic sulfonate ligands

Olga A. Efremova; Yuri A. Vorotnikov; Konstantin A. Brylev; Natalya A. Vorotnikova; Igor N. Novozhilov; Natalia V. Kuratieva; Mariya V. Edeleva; David M. Benoit; Noboru Kitamura; Yuri V. Mironov; Michael A. Shestopalov; Andrew J. Sutherland

This article describes the synthesis, structures and systematic study of the spectroscopic and redox properties of a series of octahedral molybdenum metal cluster complexes with aromatic sulfonate ligands (nBu4N)2[{Mo6X8}(OTs)6] and (nBu4N)2[{Mo6X8}(PhSO3)6] (where X- is Cl-, Br- or I-; OTs- is p-toluenesulfonate and PhSO3- is benzenesulfonate). All the complexes demonstrated photoluminescence in the red region and an ability to generate singlet oxygen. Notably, the highest quantum yields (>0.6) and narrowest emission bands were found for complexes with a {Mo6I8}4+ cluster core. Moreover, cyclic voltammetric studies revealed that (nBu4N)2[{Mo6X8}(OTs)6] and (nBu4N)2[{Mo6X8}(PhSO3)6] confer enhanced stability towards electrochemical oxidation relative to corresponding starting complexes (nBu4N)2[{Mo6X8}X6].


Tetrahedron Letters | 2000

Synthesis and evaluation of a scintillant-containing solid support for use in combinatorial chemistry

Bruce Clapham; Andrew J. Sutherland

Abstract A scintillant monomer, 2,5-diphenyl-4-vinyloxazole, has been synthesised and co-polymerised with 4-ethylstyrene, divinylbenzene and 4-vinylbenzyl chloride in the presence of a toluene porogen, to form a scintillant-containing macroporous resin. Despite prolonged exposure to organic solvent, this resin retains the ability to scintillate efficiently in the presence of ionising radiation.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Synthesis and Characterization of Dual-Functionalized Core-Shell Fluorescent Microspheres for Bioconjugation and Cellular Delivery

Jonathan M. Behrendt; David A. Nagel; Evita Chundoo; Lois M. Alexander; Damien Dupin; Anna V. Hine; Mark Bradley; Andrew J. Sutherland

The efficient transport of micron-sized beads into cells, via a non-endocytosis mediated mechanism, has only recently been described. As such there is considerable scope for optimization and exploitation of this procedure to enable imaging and sensing applications to be realized. Herein, we report the design, synthesis and characterization of fluorescent microsphere-based cellular delivery agents that can also carry biological cargoes. These core-shell polymer microspheres possess two distinct chemical environments; the core is hydrophobic and can be labeled with fluorescent dye, to permit visual tracking of the microsphere during and after cellular delivery, whilst the outer shell renders the external surfaces of the microspheres hydrophilic, thus facilitating both bioconjugation and cellular compatibility. Cross-linked core particles were prepared in a dispersion polymerization reaction employing styrene, divinylbenzene and a thiol-functionalized co-monomer. These core particles were then shelled in a seeded emulsion polymerization reaction, employing styrene, divinylbenzene and methacrylic acid, to generate orthogonally functionalized core-shell microspheres which were internally labeled via the core thiol moieties through reaction with a thiol reactive dye (DY630-maleimide). Following internal labeling, bioconjugation of green fluorescent protein (GFP) to their carboxyl-functionalized surfaces was successfully accomplished using standard coupling protocols. The resultant dual-labeled microspheres were visualized by both of the fully resolvable fluorescence emissions of their cores (DY630) and shells (GFP). In vitro cellular uptake of these microspheres by HeLa cells was demonstrated conventionally by fluorescence-based flow cytometry, whilst MTT assays demonstrated that 92% of HeLa cells remained viable after uptake. Due to their size and surface functionalities, these far-red-labeled microspheres are ideal candidates for in vitro, cellular delivery of proteins.

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Konstantin A. Brylev

Novosibirsk State University

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Yuri V. Mironov

Novosibirsk State University

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Paul O'Brien

University of Manchester

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Bruce Clapham

Nottingham Trent University

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