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Dive into the research topics where David J. Hayne is active.

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Featured researches published by David J. Hayne.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Melt-induced fluorescent signature in a simple naphthalenediimide.

Toby D. M. Bell; Sheshanath V. Bhosale; Craig M. Forsyth; David J. Hayne; Kenneth P. Ghiggino; James A. Hutchison; Chintan H. Jani; Steven J. Langford; Marcia A.-P. Lee; Clint P. Woodward

The synthesis and fluorescence properties of a naphthalenediimide ditosylate are presented. The fluorescence is highly solvent and morphology dependent with a dramatic change in fluorescence output occurring following melting from a crystalline form. This observation is attributed to thermal disruption of the crystal structure allowing the formation of emissive dimers within the amorphous melt.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Diagnostic imaging agents for alzheimer's disease: Copper radiopharmaceuticals that target aβ plaques

James L. Hickey; SinChun Lim; David J. Hayne; Brett M. Paterson; Jonathan M. White; Victor L. Villemagne; Peter Roselt; David Binns; Carleen Cullinane; Charmaine M. Jeffery; Roger I. Price; Kevin J. Barnham; Paul S. Donnelly

One of the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimers disease is the presence of amyloid-β plaques in the brain and the major constituent of these plaques is aggregated amyloid-β peptide. New thiosemicarbazone-pyridylhydrazine based ligands that incorporate functional groups designed to bind amyloid-β plaques have been synthesized. The new ligands form stable four coordinate complexes with a positron-emitting radioactive isotope of copper, (64)Cu. Two of the new Cu(II) complexes include a functionalized styrylpyridine group and these complexes bind to amyloid-β plaques in samples of post-mortem human brain tissue. Strategies to increase brain uptake by functional group manipulation have led to a (64)Cu complex that effectively crosses the blood-brain barrier in wild-type mice. The new complexes described in this manuscript provide insight into strategies to deliver metal complexes to amyloid-β plaques.


Journal of Labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals | 2014

Rhenium and technetium tricarbonyl complexes of 1,4‐Substituted pyridyl‐1,2,3‐triazole bidentate ‘click’ ligands conjugated to a targeting RGD peptide

Timothy U. Connell; David J. Hayne; Uwe Ackermann; Henri Tochon-Danguy; Jonathan M. White; Paul S. Donnelly

New 1,4-substituted pyridyl-1,2,3-triazole ligands with pendent phenyl isothiocyanate functional groups linked to the heterocycle through a short methylene or longer polyethylene glycol spacers were prepared and conjugated to a peptide containing the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid peptide motif. Rhenium and technetium carbonyl complexes, [M(CO)3 L(x) (py)](+) (where M = Re(I) or (99m) Tc(I) ; L(x)  = 1,4-substituted pyridyl-1,2,3-triazole ligands and py = pyridine) were prepared. One rhenium complex has been characterized by X-ray crystallography, and the luminescent properties of [M(CO)3 L(x) (py)](+) are reported.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Toward hypoxia-selective rhenium and technetium tricarbonyl complexes.

Andrea J. North; David J. Hayne; Christine Schieber; Katherine A. Price; Anthony R. White; Peter J. Crouch; Angela Rigopoulos; Graeme O'Keefe; Henri Tochon-Danguy; Andrew M. Scott; Jonathan M. White; Uwe Ackermann; Paul S. Donnelly

With the aim of preparing hypoxia-selective imaging and therapeutic agents, technetium(I) and rhenium(I) tricarbonyl complexes with pyridylhydrazone, dipyridylamine, and pyridylaminocarboxylate ligands containing nitrobenzyl or nitroimidazole functional groups have been prepared. The rhenium tricarbonyl complexes were synthesized with short reaction times using microwave irradiation. Rhenium tricarbonyl complexes with deprotonated p-nitrophenyl pyridylhydrazone ligands are luminescent, and this has been used to track their uptake in HeLa cells using confocal fluorescent microscopy. Selected rhenium tricarbonyl complexes displayed higher uptake in hypoxic cells when compared to normoxic cells. A (99m)Tc tricarbonyl complex with a dipyridylamine ligand bearing a nitroimidazole functional group is stable in human serum and was shown to localize in a human renal cell carcinoma (RCC; SK-RC-52) tumor in a mouse.


Dalton Transactions | 2015

Rhenium and technetium complexes that bind to amyloid-β plaques

David J. Hayne; Andrea J. North; Michelle Fodero-Tavoletti; Jonathan M. White; Lin W. Hung; Angela Rigopoulos; Catriona McLean; Paul A. Adlard; Uwe Ackermann; Henri Tochon-Danguy; Victor L. Villemagne; Kevin J. Barnham; Paul S. Donnelly

Alzheimers disease is associated with the presence of insoluble protein deposits in the brain called amyloid plaques. The major constituent of these deposits is aggregated amyloid-β peptide. Technetium-99m complexes that bind to amyloid-β plaques could provide important diagnostic information on amyloid-β plaque burden using Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT). Tridentate ligands with a stilbene functional group were used to form complexes with the fac-[M(I)(CO)3](+) (M = Re or (99m)Tc) core. The rhenium carbonyl complexes with tridentate co-ligands that included a stilbene functional group and a dimethylamino substituent bound to amyloid-β present in human frontal cortex brain tissue from subjects with Alzheimers disease. This chemistry was extended to make the analogous [(99m)Tc(I)(CO)3](+) complexes and the complexes were sufficiently stable in human serum. Whilst the lipophilicity (log D7.4) of the technetium complexes appeared ideally suited for penetration of the blood-brain barrier, preliminary biodistribution studies in an AD mouse model (APP/PS1) revealed relatively low brain uptake (0.24% ID g(-1) at 2 min post injection).


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2016

A gallium(III) Schiff base-curcumin complex that binds to amyloid-β plaques.

Jaclyn L. Lange; David J. Hayne; Peter Roselt; Catriona McLean; Jonathan M. White; Paul S. Donnelly

Gallium-68 is a positron-emitting isotope that can be used in positron-emission tomography imaging agents. Alzheimers disease is associated with the formation of plaques in the brain primarily comprised of aggregates of a 42 amino acid protein called amyloid-β. With the goal of synthesising charge neutral, low molecular weight, lipophilic gallium complexes with the potential to cross the blood-brain barrier and bind to Aβ plaques we have used an ancillary tetradentate N2O2 Schiff base ligand and the β-diketone curcumin as a bidentate ligand to give a six-coordinate Ga3+ complex. The tetradentate Schiff base ligand adopts the cis-β configuration with deprotonated curcumin acting as a bidentate ligand. The complex binds to amyloid-β plaques in human brain tissue and it is possible that extension of this chemistry to positron-emitting gallium-68 could provide useful imaging agents for Alzheimers disease.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Synthesis of Oxorhenium(V) and Oxotechnetium(V) Complexes That Bind to Amyloid-β Plaques

David J. Hayne; Jonathan M. White; Catriona McLean; Victor L. Villemagne; Kevin J. Barnham; Paul S. Donnelly

Alzheimers disease is characterized by the presence of amyloid plaques in the brain. The primary constituents of the plaques are aggregated forms of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide. With the goal of preparing technetium-99(m) complexes that bind to Aβ plaques with the potential to be diagnostic imaging agents for Alzheimers disease, new tetradentate ligands capable of forming neutral and lipophilic complexes with oxotechentium(V) and oxorhenium(V) were prepared. Nonradioactive isotopes of technetium are not available so rhenium was used as a surrogate for exploratory chemistry. Two planar tetradentate N3O ligands were prepared that form charge-neutral complexes with oxorhenium(v) as well as a ligand featuring a styrylpyridyl functional group designed to bind to Aβ plaques. All three ligands formed complexes with oxorhenium(V), and each complex was characterized by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and X-ray crystallography. The oxorhenium(V) complex with a styrylpyridyl functional group binds to Aβ plaques present in post-mortem human brain tissue. The chemistry was extrapolated to technetium-99(m) at the tracer level for two of the ligands. The resulting oxotechnetium(V) complexes were sufficiently lipophilic and charge-neutral to suggest that they have the potential to cross the blood-brain barrier but exhibited modest stability with respect to exchange with histidine. The chemistry presented here identifies a strategy to integrate styrylpyridyl functional groups into tetradentate ligands capable of forming complexes with [M═O](3+) cores (M = Re or Tc).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Effect of Structural Modifications to Glyoxal-bis(thiosemicarbazonato)copper(II) Complexes on Cellular Copper Uptake, Copper-Mediated ATP7A Trafficking, and P-Glycoprotein Mediated Efflux

Karla M. Acevedo; David J. Hayne; Lachlan E. McInnes; Asif Noor; Clare Duncan; Diane Moujalled; Irene Volitakis; Angela Rigopoulos; Kevin J. Barnham; Victor L. Villemagne; Anthony R. White; Paul S. Donnelly

Bis(thiosemicarbazonato)copper(II) complexes are of interest as potential therapeutics for cancer and neurodegenerative diseases as well as imaging agents for positron emission tomography (PET). The cellular uptake of six bis(thiosemcarbazonato)copper(II)complexes derived from glyoxal, with different functional groups Cu(gtsx) where x = different functional groups, was investigated in SKOV-3, HEK293, and HEK293 P-gp cell lines. Treatment of the cells with the copper complexes increased intracellular copper and increased levels of p-ERK due to activation of the Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK pathway. Treatment of SKOV-3 cells with low concentrations (μM) of two of the copper complexes led to trafficking of the endogenous copper transporter ATP7A from the Golgi network to the cell membrane. Experiments in HEK293 and HEK293-P-gp cells suggest that Cu(gtsm) and Cu(gtse) are substrates for the P-gp efflux protein but the complex with a pyrrolidine functional group, Cu(gtspyr), is not. A PET experiment in mice showed that [64Cu]Cu(gtspyr) has reasonable brain uptake but high liver uptake.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2018

Mixed annihilation electrogenerated chemiluminescence of iridium(iii) complexes

Lachlan C. Soulsby; David J. Hayne; Egan H. Doeven; David J. D. Wilson; Johnny Agugiaro; Timothy U. Connell; Lifen Chen; Conor F. Hogan; Emily Kerr; Jacqui L. Adcock; Paul S. Donnelly; Jonathan M. White; Paul S. Francis

Previously reported annihilation ECL of mixtures of metal complexes have generally comprised Ir(ppy)3 or a close analogue as a higher energy donor/emitter (green/blue light) and [Ru(bpy)3]2+ or its derivative as a lower energy acceptor/emitter (red light). In contrast, here we examine Ir(ppy)3 as the lower energy acceptor/emitter, by combining it with a second Ir(iii) complex: [Ir(df-ppy)2(ptb)]+ (where ptb = 1-benzyl-1,2,3-triazol-4-ylpyridine). The application of potentials sufficient to attain the first single-electron oxidation and reduction products can be exploited to detect Ir(ppy)3 at orders of magnitude lower concentration, or enhance its maximum emission intensity at high concentration far beyond that achievable through conventional annihilation ECL of Ir(ppy)3 involving comproportionation. Moreover, under certain conditions, the colour of the emission can be selected through the applied electrochemical potentials. We have also prepared a novel Ir(iii) complex with a sufficiently low reduction potential that the reaction between its reduced form and Ir(ppy)3+ cannot populate the excited state of either luminophore. This enabled, for the first time, the exclusive formation of either excited state through the application of higher cathodic or anodic potentials, but in both cases, the ECL was greatly diminished by parasitic dark reactions.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2018

Cu-II(atsm) Attenuates Neuroinflammation

Xin Yi Choo; Jeffrey R. Liddell; Mikko T. Huuskonen; Alexandra Grubman; Diane Moujalled; Jessica Roberts; Kai Kysenius; Lauren Patten; Hazel Quek; Lotta E. Oikari; Clare Duncan; Simon A. James; Lachlan E. McInnes; David J. Hayne; Paul S. Donnelly; Eveliina Pollari; Suvi Vähätalo; Katarína Lejavová; Mikko I. Kettunen; Tarja Malm; Jari Koistinaho; Anthony R. White; Katja M. Kanninen

Background: Neuroinflammation and biometal dyshomeostasis are key pathological features of several neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Inflammation and biometals are linked at the molecular level through regulation of metal buffering proteins such as the metallothioneins. Even though the molecular connections between metals and inflammation have been demonstrated, little information exists on the effect of copper modulation on brain inflammation. Methods: We demonstrate the immunomodulatory potential of the copper bis(thiosemicarbazone) complex CuII(atsm) in an neuroinflammatory model in vivo and describe its anti-inflammatory effects on microglia and astrocytes in vitro. Results: By using a sophisticated in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) approach, we report the efficacy of CuII(atsm) in reducing acute cerebrovascular inflammation caused by peripheral administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). CuII(atsm) also induced anti-inflammatory outcomes in primary microglia [significant reductions in nitric oxide (NO), monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)] and astrocytes [significantly reduced NO, MCP-1, and interleukin 6 (IL-6)] in vitro. These anti-inflammatory actions were associated with increased cellular copper levels and increased the neuroprotective protein metallothionein-1 (MT1) in microglia and astrocytes. Conclusion: The beneficial effects of CuII(atsm) on the neuroimmune system suggest copper complexes are potential therapeutics for the treatment of neuroinflammatory conditions.

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Anthony R. White

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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