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Carl J. Carrano Phone: 619-594-5929
We're looking for potential biochem/molecular bio students to work on the phytoplankton/bacterial interaction project. Please, read about the project and if interested, contact us.
Go to the News section to hear Prof. Carrano's interview on radio & TV. I have published extensively in the field of
bioinorganic chemistry and have authored over 130 research publications.
In addition, I am the North American Editor for the International Journal
BioMetals. My group generally contains a mix of undergraduates, graduate
students, as well as postdocs. Indeed, I consider the training of graduate
students and postdoc’s for careers in academic teaching/research institutions to
be an important duty. My students have been most successful in this regard with
many now holding such positions. I also bring my extensive international
experience, having spent (in total) several years in
Currently, I have funding from both the NSF and the Dreyfus Foundation and therefore am actively recruiting students to work in my laboratory. My research interests are wide ranging. In bioinorganic chemistry these extend from models for zinc, molybdenum and non-heme iron metalloprotein active sites, to design of metal complexes as artificial restriction enzymes for molecular biology to the mechanisms of iron transport and storage in microorganisms to the design and synthesis of new metallodrugs to the study of isotopic fractionation of iron in microorganisms. A recent area of interest is in marine science and the relationship between harmful algal blooms (the so called red tides) and iron and boron metabolism in phytoplankton and bacteria symbiotic with them. This is a collaborative project between us and workers at UC Santa Barbara and at the Scottish Association for Marine Science. Finally, I am interested in materials science and the rational synthesis of solid state materials using a building block approach. These projects expose students to a wide range of modern research techniques including X-ray crystallography, NMR, computational chemistry, natural-products isolation, HPLC, ESI-MS, ICP-MS, molecular biology, electron microscopy, etc. I bring particular strengths in X-ray crystallography and am in charge of our new CCD based diffractometer. My former students, previous postdoc's, and I have solved over 500 structures and there will be ample opportunity for any interested students to learn this important technique. This goes for both the graduate students and the undergraduates. In fact, I had one undergraduate student who solved more than 20 structures and had 13 papers with me when he finished! I hope this brief outline of my background and interests is helpful. I look forward to hearing from you if you are interested.
Selected Publications:
Santillan, G. A.; Carrano, C. J. Synthesis and Characterization of Copper(II) Complexes of Nonfacially Coordinating Heteroscorpionate Ligands (4-Carboxyphenyl)bis(3,5-dimethylpyrazolyl)methane and (3-Carboxyphenyl)bis(3,5-dimethylpyrazolyl)methane. Inorgic Chemistry (2007), 46(5), 1751-1759. Kuepper, Frithjof C.; Carrano, Carl J.; Kuhn, Jens-Uwe; Butler, Alison. Photoreactivity of Iron(III)-Aerobactin: Photoproduct Structure and Iron(III) Coordination. Inorganic Chemistry (2006), 45(15), 6028-6033. Hoffman, Justin T.; Carrano, Carl J.. S versus O alkylation and coordination in zinc complexes containing the bulky heteroscorpionate alkoxy ligand bis(3,5-dimethylpyrazol-2-yl)diphenylmethanol. Inorganica Chimica Acta (2006), 359(4), 1248-1254. Smith, Jennifer N.; Hoffman, Justin T.; Shirin, Zahida; Carrano, Carl J.. H-Bonding Interactions and Control of Thiolate Nucleophilicity and Specificity in Model Complexes of Zinc Metalloproteins. Inorganic Chemistry (2005), 44(6), 2012-2017. Hoffman, Justin T.; Einwaechter, Simon; Chohan, Balwant S.; Basu, Partha; Carrano, Carl J.. Isomerization and oxygen atom transfer reactivity in oxo-Mo complexes of relevance to molybdoenzymes. [Erratum to document cited in CA142:088703]. Inorganic Chemistry (2005), 44(1), 158.
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Contact Information: Office: GMCS-209 (Chemistry Dept Office) Phone: (619)594-5929 email: carrano@sciences.sdsu.edu |
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Office: GMCS-209 Office Phone: (619)594-5929 Lab 1 Phone: (619)594-5574 Lab2 Phone: (619)594-5577 Email: carrano@sciences.sdsu.edu |