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Paul S. Donnelly

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  215
Citations -  7933

Paul S. Donnelly is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Copper & Biodistribution. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 202 publications receiving 6785 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul S. Donnelly include University of Western Australia & University of Cambridge.

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Synthesis, Structure and Gas-Phase Reactivity of a Silver Hydride Complex [Ag3{(PPh2)2CH2}3(μ3-H)(μ3-Cl)]BF4†

TL;DR: This work reports on the serendipitous MSbased discovery of a novel silver hydride cluster, [Ag3HClL3] + (L = bis(phosphino) ligand), which has prompted its massspectrometry-directed synthesis and X-ray and neutron crystallographic structural characterization, which reveal a {Ag3(m3-H)( m3-Cl)} + core structure.
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New perspectives on the annihilation electrogenerated chemiluminescence of mixed metal complexes in solution

TL;DR: This work examines energy transfer and quenching within annihilation ECL systems comprising mixed metal-complexes in solution, and shows the dependence of the emission intensities on luminophore concentration and the applied potentials.
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A Versatile Approach for the Site-Specific Modification of Recombinant Antibodies Using a Combination of Enzyme-Mediated Bioconjugation and Click Chemistry†

TL;DR: A unique two-step modular system for site-specific antibody modification and conjugation is reported, which could be readily adapted to incorporate a large array of tailor-made functional groups using reliable click chemistry whilst preserving the activity of the antibody or other sensitive biological macromolecules.
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Copper(I)-catalyzed cycloaddition of silver acetylides and azides: Incorporation of volatile acetylenes into the triazole core

TL;DR: This work demonstrates that silver acetylides serve as suitable precursors for entry into copper-mediated coupling reactions, and allows the incorporation of volatile and difficult-to-handle acetylenes into the triazole core.
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Copper-64 Labeled Macrobicyclic Sarcophagine Coupled to a GRP Receptor Antagonist Shows Great Promise for PET Imaging of Prostate Cancer

TL;DR: The stability of 64 Cu complexes of MeCOSar, the long half-life of 64Cu, and the suitable biodistribution profile of the 64Cu-labeled peptides lead to PET images of high contrast suitable for potential translation into the clinic.