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                     Early Transition radiometal chemistry
                     Increasing availability of high energy, biomedical cyclotrons provides access to radiometals
                     with properties suitable for PET imaging and radiotherapy. We are interested in exploring
                     the the aqueous, radioactive coordination chemistry of early transition metals/pseudolanthanides,
                     specifically Ti(IV), Zr(IV), Sc(III) and Y(III), and applying this chemistry to the
                     imaging and treatment of cancer.
                   
                  
                      
                     Lanthanide-based Imaging probes
                      
                      
                     
                  
               
            
            
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
            
         
         
         
      
   
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Faculty
Eszter Boros, Associate Professor

M.S. University of Zurich, 2007
Ph.D. University of British Columbia, 2011
Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard Medical School/ MGH, 2011-2015
629 Chemistry
Phone: (631) 632-8572
Email: eszter.boros@stonybrook.edu
Research focus
We harness the rich structural diversity of metal complexes paired with their versatile
                     luminescent and radioactive properties for the development and application of new
                     metal-based molecular imaging probes and therapeutics for personalized medicine. We
                     are interested in the following applications:
                  Early Transition radiometal chemistry
                     Increasing availability of high energy, biomedical cyclotrons provides access to radiometals
                     with properties suitable for PET imaging and radiotherapy. We are interested in exploring
                     the the aqueous, radioactive coordination chemistry of early transition metals/pseudolanthanides,
                     specifically Ti(IV), Zr(IV), Sc(III) and Y(III), and applying this chemistry to the
                     imaging and treatment of cancer.Representative publications:
                     B. A. Vaughn, S. H. Ahn, E. Aluicio-Sarduy, J. Devaraj, A. P Olson, J. W. Engle and
                           E. Boros. Chelation with a Twist: A Bifunctional Chelator to Enable Room Temperature Radiolabeling
                              and Targeted PET Imaging with Scandium-44.Chem. Sci.2019. in press 
                     E. E. Racow, J. Kreinbihl, A. G. Cosby, Y. Yang, A. Pandey, E. Boros, C. J. Johnson.
                           A General Approach to Direct Measurement of the Hydration State of Coordination Complexes
                              in the Gas Phase: Variable Temperature Mass Spectrometry. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2019, 141, 14650-14660
                     Lanthanide-based Imaging probes
                     The prognosis and survival of patients with aggressive cancers depends on the presence
                        of positive tumor margins (defined as the presence of tumor cells in the surrounding
                        area) post surgical resection. Combining radioactive and luminescent reporters in
                        a targeted molecular probe has the potential to provide pre-operative nuclear imaging,
                        real-time luminescence-guided surgery followed by ex vivo imaging with one single
                        probe. We are interested in employing luminescent lanthanides for in vivo optical
                        imaging by in situ excitation of lanthanide uminescence with Cherenkov radiation emissive
                        radioisotopes. 
                     Representative publications:
                     A. G. Cosby, S. H. Ahn, E. Boros. Cherenkov Radiation Mediated In Situ Excitation of Discrete Luminescent Lanthanide
                              Complexes.Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2018, 57, 15496-15499.
                     A. G. Cosby, G. Quevedo, and E. Boros. A High-Throughput Method To Measure Relative Quantum Yield of Lanthanide Complexes
                              for Bioimaging. Inorg. Chem.2019, 58, 10611-10615
                  Imaging and treatment of bacterial infections with siderophores
Antibiotic resistance is an imminent global health threat. Accelerated diagnosis and
                     new life-saving treatments are needed to overcome resistance. Most pathogens have
                     developed sophisticated mechanisms to sequester the essential metal ion Fe(III) from
                     their host. This process involves Fe(III) chelators called siderophores. Naturally
                     occurring and synthetic siderophores can act as Trojan horses to deliver antibiotics
                     to the site of infection. These conjugates are referred to as sideromycins. We are
                     exploring sideromycins as new therapeutic and imaging tools for the treatment of bacterial
                     infections.
                  Representative publications:
A. Pandey, C. Savino, S. H. Ahn, Z. Yang, S. G. Van Lanen, E. Boros. Theranostic Gallium Siderophore Ciprofloxacin Conjugate with Broad Spectrum Antibiotic
                           Potency.J. Med. Chem.2019, 62, 9947-9960.
Techniques
Work in our lab is multidisciplinary and encompasses: organic and inorganic chemical
                     synthesis, radiochemistry, analytical chemistry, biological chemistry, in vitro and
                     in vivo imaging in preclinical animal models of disease. We are interested in exploring
                     and understanding the structure-activity relationships of the metal complexes we synthesize, placing
                     us in the realm of medicinal chemistry with an inorganic twist!
                  
