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K C Nicolaou

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Name
  
K. Nicolaou

Role
  
Chemist


Fields
  
Chemistry

Notable students
  
Phil S. Baran

K. C. Nicolaou The KCN Chemistry Group

Institutions
  
Rice University Scripps Research Institute University of California, San Diego University of Pennsylvania ICES A*STAR

Alma mater
  
University College London

Known for
  
Total synthesis Total synthesis of Taxol

Residence
  
Houston, Texas, United States

Education
  
University of London (1972), Columbia University, Harvard University

Awards
  
Benjamin Franklin Medal, Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Books
  
Classics in total synthesis II, Molecules That Changed, Classics in Total Synthesis

K c nicolaou 2011 laureate of the franklin institute in chemistry


Kyriacos Costa Nicolaou (Greek: Κυριάκος Κ. Νικολάου) is a Cypriot-American chemist known for his research in the area of natural products total synthesis. He is currently Harry C. and Olga K. Wiess Professor of Chemistry at Rice University, having previously held academic positions at The Scripps Research Institute/UC San Diego and the University of Pennsylvania.

Contents

K. C. Nicolaou KCNjpg

Tech talk by prof k c nicolaou


Biography

K. C. Nicolaou Capital Soup Florida News Straight from the Source

K. C. Nicolaou was born on July 5, 1946, in Karavas, Cyprus where he grew up and went to school until the age of 18. In 1964, he went to England where he spent two years learning English and preparing to enter University. He studied chemistry at the University of London. (B.Sc., 1969, Bedford College; Ph.D. 1972, University College London, with Professors F. Sondheimer and P. J. Garratt). In 1972, he moved to the United States and, after postdoctoral appointments at Columbia University (1972–1973, Professor T. J. Katz) and Harvard University (1973–1976, Professor E. J. Corey), he joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania where he became the Rhodes-Thompson Professor of Chemistry. While at Penn, he won the prestigious Sloan Fellowship.

K. C. Nicolaou K C Nicolaou Awarded ChemViews Magazine ChemistryViews

In 1989, he relocated to San Diego, where he took up a joint appointment at the University of California, San Diego, where he served as Professor of Chemistry, and The Scripps Research Institute, where he was Darlene Shiley Professor of Chemistry and Chairman of the Department of Chemistry. In 1996, he was appointed Aline W. and L.S. Skaggs Professor of Chemical Biology in The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute. From 2005 to 2011, he directed Chemical Synthesis Laboratory @ ICES-A*STAR, Singapore. In 2013, Nicolaou moved to Rice University.

K. C. Nicolaou The KCN Chemistry Group

The Nicolaou group is active in the field of organic chemistry with research interests in methodology development and total synthesis. He is responsible for the synthesis of many complex molecules found in nature, such as Taxol and vancomycin. His group's route to Taxol, completed in 1994 at roughly the same time as a synthesis by the group of Robert A. Holton, attracted national news media attention due to Taxol's structural complexity and its potent anti-cancer activity.

Total syntheses accomplished

K. C. Nicolaou The KCN Chemistry Group

  • Endiandric acids A–D (1982)
  • Amphoteronolide B and Amphotericin B (1987)
  • Calicheamicin γ1 (1992)
  • Sirolimus (1993)
  • Taxol (1994)
  • Zaragozic acid A (1994)
  • Brevetoxin B (1995)
  • Vancomycin (1998)
  • Uncialamycin (2008)
  • Viridicatumtoxin B (2013)
  • Shishijimicin A (2015)
  • Thailanstatin A (2016)
  • Books

    K. C. Nicolaou KC Nicolaou receives Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry

    He is also the co-author of three popular books on total synthesis:

    1. Classics in Total Synthesis I, 1996[1]
    2. Classics in Total Synthesis II, 2003[2]
    3. Classics in Total Synthesis III, 2011[3]

    Additionally, he authored or co-authored several other books:

    1. Molecules That Changed the World, 2008
    2. Handbook of Combinatorial Chemistry: Drugs, Catalysts, Materials, 2002
    3. Selenium in Natural Products Synthesis, 1984

    Awards

    K. C. Nicolaou has received numerous awards and honors including:

  • 2016 Wolf Prize in Chemistry (Israel)
  • 2011 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry (Franklin Institute USA)[4]
  • 2005 Arthur C. Cope Award (USA)
  • 2003 Nobel Laureate Signature Award in Graduate Education (with Phil S. Baran)
  • 2002 Tetrahedron Prize
  • 2001 Ernst Schering Prize (Germany)
  • 2000 Paul Karrer Gold Medal (Switzerland)
  • 1998 Esselen Award (USA)
  • 1996 Linus Pauling Award (USA)
  • Aspirin Prize (Spain)
  • Max Tishler Prize Lecture (Harvard)
  • Yamada Prize (Japan)
  • Janssen Prize (Belgium)
  • Nagoya Medal (Japan)
  • Centenary Medal (Royal Society UK)
  • Inhoffen Medal (Germany)
  • Nichols Medal (USA)
  • ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry (USA)
  • ACS Guenther Award in Natural Products Chemistry (USA)
  • Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • Member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Foreign Member of the Royal Society (2013)
  • Several honorary degrees
  • References

    K. C. Nicolaou Wikipedia