Skip Navigation
Search

Faculty


Dale G. Drueckhammer, Professor

Dale Drueckhammer

B.S. Tarleton State University, 1983
Ph.D. Texas A and M University, 1987
NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship, Harvard Medical School, 1987-1989
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, 1995-1997

741 Chemistry
Phone: (631) 632-7923
Email: dale.drueckhammer@stonybrook.edu

Bioorganic Chemistry

My research can be summarized as the design, synthesis, and study of new organic molecules, primarily directed toward biological applications. The majority of work in my group involves the design and synthesis of artificial receptors for biological compounds and ions. Current specific targets for receptor design include nucleic acids, inorganic arsenic, glucose, and specific dicysteine motif-containing peptides/proteins. The design aspects of this work involve extensive use of computer modeling and novel use of the computer program HostDesigner, following up on earlier work using a similar program CAVEAT. HostDesigner is used to discover structures that allow precise positioning of functional groups for efficient multivalent interaction with the target compound. Compounds designed using our computer-based methods are synthesized and studied as receptors for the targeted biological compounds and ions in solution. Incorporation of fluorescent signaling moieties into these receptors provides fluorescence-based sensors of potential use in medical and environmental diagnostic applications. In a somewhat unrelated project, we are developing experimental and data analysis protocols for measuring rates of chemical reactions using isothermal titration calorimetry, a technique that is generally used only to measure equilibrium binding constants.

Research in my group is based largely on synthesis and students in my group spend most of their time doing synthetic chemistry. Individual projects may also involve computational modeling and measurements of binding constants by NMR, calorimetry, fluorescence, etc. 

Awards/Honors

  • EPA Green Chemistry Challenge Award, 2000.

Some representative Publications

Scaffold Design using Computational Chemistry  D. G. Drueckhammer, in “Chemosensors: Principles, Strategies, and Applications”, B. Wang and E. V. Anslyn, editors; John Wiley and Sons.  2011.

Acetone-Heptane as a Solvent System for Combining Chromatography on Silica Gel with Solvent Recycling  D. G. Drueckhammer, S. Q. Gao, X. Liang, and J. Liao,  ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, 2013, 1, 87-90.

Arsinous acid as a thiol binding group: potential cysteine peptide tagging functionality that binds a single thiol, X. Liang and D. G. Drueckhammer, New J. Chem., 2014, 38, 1368-1371.

Computer-guided design of a Cu(II) receptor and sensor, C. Lin and D. G. Drueckhammer, New. J. Chem., 2006, 30, 1725-1730.

A Modular Molecular Tweezer Designed using CAVEAT, H. Huang and D. G. Drueckhammer, Chem. Commun., 2006, 2995-2997.

A Computer-Designed Macrocyclic Zinc Receptor, H. Huang and D. G. Drueckhammer, Chem. Commun., 2005, 5196-5198.

Computer-guided design in molecular recognition: Design and synthesis of a glucopyranose receptor, W. Yang H. He, and D. G. Drueckhammer, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2001, 40 (9), 1714-1718.