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A Themed Issue in Honor of Professor Adam Pron on the Occasion of His 70th Birthday – a Career of Beautiful Science from Conducting Polymers to Active Molecular Materials and Quantum Dots

A special issue of Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049). This special issue belongs to the section "Materials Chemistry".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 August 2022) | Viewed by 7055

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Guest Editor
IUF honorary member, Laboratoire Photophysique et Photochimie Supramoléculaires et Macromoléculaires, Cachan, France
Interests: organic heterocyclic chemistry (polyazaaromatics); tetrazines; electrochemistry; NLO; sol–gel chemistry; nanomaterials; fluorescence; perovskites
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Dear Colleagues,

Professor Pron was born in 1951 and educated in Poland. In 1980, he completed his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania (USA) under the supervision of Alan G. MacDiarmid, Nobel Prize laureate of 2000. In the same year, he returned to his native country, Poland, and started working at the Warsaw University of Technology where he obtained his habilitation in 1988 and became full professor in 1993. In the period of 1989–1996, he shared his time between AGH University of Technology in Krakow and Warsaw University of Technology. In 1991–1993, he served as an advisor in an industrial company, “UNIAX” Corporation, in Santa Barbara, California, where he  closely collaborated with Alan J. Heeger, another Nobel Prize laureate. In 1998, he moved to the Atomic Energy Commission (CEA, presently Atomic and Alternatives Energies Commission) in Grenoble. In March 2012, he retired from CEA and became full-time professor at the Warsaw University of Technology in Poland. In 2002, professor Pron obtained the Prize of Polish Foundation for Research—the most prestigious scientific award in Poland. In 2011, he received the Zawidzki Medal—the highest distinction in Poland in physical chemistry. In 2019, he was awarded the Sniadecki Medal—the highest distinction given to a Polish chemist by the Polish Chemical Society. Since 2008, Professor Proń has been an editor of Synthetic Metals—an Elsevier journal devoted to organic and carbon-based electroactive materials. Professor Proń has published over 340 papers, many of them in very prestigious journals such as Journal of the American Chemical Society, Chemistry of Materials, Nano Letter, Advanced Materials, Advanced Functional Materials, Chemical Communications, Nanoscale, Chemical Society Reviews, Journal of Materials Chemistry C, Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Inorganic Chemistry and many others. He is also co-author of several international patents on new functional materials. In the past, he has succeeded in obtaining several important grants from governmental grant agencies as well as purely industrial grants from such companies as Hitachi, Hutchinson and others. Thus far, he has supervised 18 PhD students in Poland and France. Among his former students, there are university professors in Poland, France, Brazil and India, as well as researchers in governmental laboratories and industrial R&D centers in Poland, France and the USA.

His research interests  involve materials chemistry, physical organic chemistry and, more precisely, elaboration of new organic semiconductors and functionalized inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals  (different type of quantum dots) in view of their application in organic and hybrid (organic/inorganic) electronics and optoelectronics, electrochemical devices and in biosciences.

Prof. Dr. Pierre Audebert
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • Conducting polymers
  • Active molecular materials
  • Quantum dots
  • Organic semiconductors
  • Inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals

Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

19 pages, 2963 KiB  
Review
Application of Dendrimers in Anticancer Diagnostics and Therapy
by Zuzanna Bober, Dorota Bartusik-Aebisher and David Aebisher
Molecules 2022, 27(10), 3237; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/molecules27103237 - 18 May 2022
Cited by 29 | Viewed by 2836
Abstract
The application of dendrimeric constructs in medical diagnostics and therapeutics is increasing. Dendrimers have attracted attention due to their compact, spherical three-dimensional structures with surfaces that can be modified by the attachment of various drugs, hydrophilic or hydrophobic groups, or reporter molecules. In [...] Read more.
The application of dendrimeric constructs in medical diagnostics and therapeutics is increasing. Dendrimers have attracted attention due to their compact, spherical three-dimensional structures with surfaces that can be modified by the attachment of various drugs, hydrophilic or hydrophobic groups, or reporter molecules. In the literature, many modified dendrimer systems with various applications have been reported, including drug and gene delivery systems, biosensors, bioimaging contrast agents, tissue engineering, and therapeutic agents. Dendrimers are used for the delivery of macromolecules, miRNAs, siRNAs, and many other various biomedical applications, and they are ideal carriers for bioactive molecules. In addition, the conjugation of dendrimers with antibodies, proteins, and peptides allows for the design of vaccines with highly specific and predictable properties, and the role of dendrimers as carrier systems for vaccine antigens is increasing. In this work, we will focus on a review of the use of dendrimers in cancer diagnostics and therapy. Dendrimer-based nanosystems for drug delivery are commonly based on polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM) that can be modified with drugs and contrast agents. Moreover, dendrimers can be successfully used as conjugates that deliver several substances simultaneously. The potential to develop dendrimers with multifunctional abilities has served as an impetus for the design of new molecular platforms for medical diagnostics and therapeutics. Full article
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