Martin Banwell

Martin Banwell
Professor Martin G. Banwell
Born 24 November 1954 (1954-11-24) (age 56)
Lower Hutt, New Zealand
Residence Canberra, Australia
Citizenship Australian, Kiwi
Fields Organic Chemist
Institutions ANU Research School of Chemistry

Professor Martin G. Banwell FAA, FRACI, Hon.FRSNZ (born 24 November 1954) is an Organic Chemist specialising in biotransformations and natural product synthesis.[1]

His research interests involve the Enzymatic preparation of organic molecules as synthons or building blocks for complex natural products. This technology/methodology is then applied to the synthesis of complex marine natural products from the Great Barrier Reef.[citation needed]

Contents

Career history

He received a BSc at Victoria University of Wellington in 1976, and an Honours, 1st Class from the same institution in 1977; his doctorate in 1979 is also from Victoria University, under the direction of Professor B. Halton.[1]

Banwell relocated to Ohio State University between 1979-1980 to undertake a post-doctoral fellowship before taking on the role of Senior teaching Fellow at the Department of Organic Chemistry, University of Adelaide until 1981.

Banwell then returned to New Zealand taking the role of Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Auckland until 1986, when he returned to Australia to take a similar role at the Department of Organic Chemistry at the University of Melbourne. In 1995 as an Associate Professor he moved to the Australian National University as a Senior Fellow. He was promoted to full professor in 1999.

Banwell has also previously been a guest at Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, Switzerland. Currently Prof. Banwell is a Foreign Visiting Researcher at Hiroshima University, an Asia-Pacific Representative, Advisory Board to the International Society for Heterocyclic Chemistry , a Chemistry Consultant for CSIRO Molecular Science and Member, Australian Research Council College of Experts.

Banwell currently serves on the editorial boards for several high impact journals such as; Synlett, Indian Journal of Chemistry (Section B), Australian Journal of Chemistry, Tetrahedron and Tetrahedron Letters.[citation needed]

Publications

To date Prof. Banwell has published 206 peer reviewed articles, 6 Patents, 1 Review and 1 Non-Refereed publication.[citation needed]

Fellowships and Awards

Banwell has been awarded numerous Fellowships and Awards including;[1]

Representative Publications

  • Austin, K. A. B., Banwell, M. G., Loong, D. T. J., Rae, A. D. and Willis, A. C. - A Chemoenzymatic Total Synthesis of the Undecenolide (-) Cladospolide B via a Mid-Stage Ring-Closing Metathesis and a Late-Stage Photo-Rearrangement of the E-Isomer. Org. Biomol. Chem., 3: pp. 1081–1088 (2005).
  • Freeman, C., Liu, L., Banwell, M. G., Brown, K. J., Bezos, A., Ferro, V. and Parish, C. R. - Use of Sulfated Linked Cyclitols as Heparan Sulfate Mimetics to Probe the Heparin/Heparan Sulfate Binding Specificity of Proteins. J. Biol. Chem., 280: pp. 8842–8849 (2005).
  • Banwell, M. G., Edwards, A. J., Lupton, D. W. and Whited, G. - Whole-Cell Biotransformation of m-Ethyltoluene into 1S,6R-5-Ethyl-1,6-dihydroxycyclohexa-2,4-diene-1-carboxylic Acid as an Approach to the C-Ring of the Binary Indole-Indoline Alkaloid Vinblastine. Aust. J. Chem., 58: pp. 14–17 (2005).
  • Banwell, M. G. and Lupton, D. W. - Exploiting the Palladium[0]-Catalysed Ullmann Cross-Coupling Reaction in Natural Products Chemistry: Application to a Total Synthesis of the Alkaloid (±)-Aspidospermidine. Org. Biomol. Chem., 3: pp. 213–215 (2005).
  • Banwell, M. G., Hungerford, N. L. and Jolliffe, K. A. - Synthesis of the Sialic Acid (^R) KDN and Certain Epimers from (-)-3-Dehydroshikimic Acid or (-)-Quinic Acid. Org. Lett., 6: pp. 2737–2740 (2004).

References

  1. ^ a b c Banwell, Martin (2005-04-03). "Martin Banwell CV". http://rsc.anu.edu.au/~mgb/Banwell_CV_April05.html. Retrieved 2008-03-11. 

External links


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