Professor Eric Anslyn
Winner: 2020 Centenary Prize
University of Texas at Austin
For exploiting supramolecular interactions and dynamic covalent bonding to generate assays of practical utility, and for communicating the excitement of chemistry to students of all ages.
Celebrate Professor Eric Anslyn
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The advice that I give continually is to never give up on your ideas, never stop working, and never give in to the peer-review system.
The discipline of physical organic chemistry delves into the reasons that organic compounds undergo chemical reactions, the rules for nature’s reactions, and how society can use these lessons for the improvement of humankind. Professor Anslyn uses physical organic chemistry to create sensors for a variety of practical applications, such as the detection of toxic nerve agents, improving reactions involved in drug discovery and to mimic the senses of taste and smell for the analysis of beverages as well as biological fluids for medical diagnostic purposes.
Professor Anslyn’s group took insights from chemical reactivity to create a toolkit of reactions that can store sequence information, akin to nucleic acids. The same toolkit allows for the generation of plastics that undergo triggered responses to stimuli for changing their properties, and for triggered degradation into small non-toxic molecules.
In addition, the group has helped create the first single molecule protein sequencing routine for rapid, parallel and ultra-sensitive detection of every protein in a cell, helping future medical diagnostics and biochemical analysis.
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