Sabyasachi Sarkar[1] (born 17 May 1947) is an Indian chemist. He has worked with functional models related to hyperthermophilic to mesophilicmetalloproteins enriching bioinorganic chemistry.[2][3][4][5][6][7] A Replica of a Fishy Enzyme[8] and the reduced xanthine oxidase[9] also have been made. Inhibition patterns[10] in the Michaelis complex of low molecular weight hepatic sulfite oxidase model complex have been exhibited.[11] Based on functional mimicking of a series of molybdoenzymes he showed that the even in model enzymatic oxotransfer reactions the participation of similar enzyme-susbrate (E-S) complex is a real entity. Such a chemical spices (E-S) responds to spontaneous intramolecular oxidative addition and reductive elimination to complete the oxotransfer reaction. Such a reaction differs from conventional chemical oxotransfer reaction where the reaction between the starting reactants happens in Eyring activated complex.[12] He demonstrated that carbon dioxide molecule does bind to magnesium in chlorophyll[13] in photosynthesis as proposed by R. M. Willstätter one-hundred years ago and modeled hydrogenase captioned as better than nature.[14] The rare reaction of a Cu(II) complex with aerial oxygen to generate superoxide anion and Cu(III) has been shown addressing the native SOD reaction.[15] Similarly the aspect of copper-molybdenum antagonism in ruminant animals have been investigated.[16] His research has shown the architectural marvel in silk cocoon with the natural thermostatic and humidity control with preferential oxygen gating inside cocoon as green house architecture.[17] He proposed a new magneto reception mechanism for nocturnal moth in sensing the Earth's magnetic field to navigate with a stable pool of carbon-centric free radicals along with ferromagnetic components.[18] He extended the work on nano carbon[19] and developed cheap sources of water soluble nano carbon including naturally formed graphene oxide from low grade coal.[20] These are used in the growth of young plants as promoters to slowly release micro nutrients and adsorbed water.[21][22][23][24] He explored these to explore bio-imaging[25] and demonstrating that non-toxic carbon nano onion[26][27] can cross blood–brain barrier[28] to carry drug as cargo and can be effectively be excreted from the body. The utility of such nano carbon to control mosquito breeding in preventing mosquito vectors of infectious diseases[29] and the use of reduced graphene oxide to prevent hospital pathogens have been demonstrated.[30] On the environment aspect the presence of damaged floating carbon nano tubes in aerosols is shown to contribute global warming, winter smog and elevating breathing problem.[31] He demonstrated the adverse effect of soap and detergent discharge near tube wells in releasing arsenic and fluoride contaminated water.[32] He also mapped the degradation of a heritage monument, the Taj Mahal.[33]
^Das, Samar K.; Chaudhury, Pradeep K.; Biswas, Dulali; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (1 May 2002). "Modeling for the Active Site of Sulfite Oxidase: Synthesis, Characterization, and Reactivity of [MoVIO2(mnt)2]2- (mnt2- = 1,2-Dicyanoethylenedithiolate)". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 116 (20): 9061–9070. doi:10.1021/ja00099a024.
^Das, Samar K.; Biswas, Dulali; Maiti, Rabindranath; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (14 February 1996). "Modeling the Tungsten Sites of Inactive and Active Forms of Hyperthermophilic Pyrococcus furiosus Aldehyde Ferredoxin Oxidoreductase". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 118 (6): 1387–1397. doi:10.1021/ja9511580.
^Yadav, Jyoti; Das, Samar K.; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (7 May 1997). "A Functional Mimic of the New Class of Tungstoenzyme, Acetylene Hydratase". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 119 (18): 4315–4316. doi:10.1021/ja970134l.
^Majumdar, Amit; Pal, Kuntal; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (11 March 2006). "Chemistry of [Et 4 N] [Mo IV (SPh) (PPh 3) (mnt) 2] as an Analogue of Dissimilatory Nitrate Reductase with Its Inactivation on Substitution of Thiolate by Chloride". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 128 (13): 4196–4197. doi:10.1021/ja0586135. PMID16568972.
^Moula, Golam; Bose, Moumita; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (17 April 2013). "Replica of a Fishy Enzyme: Structure–Function Analogue of Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Reductase". Inorganic Chemistry. 52 (9): 5316–5327. doi:10.1021/ic4002576. PMID23594155.
^Mitra, Joyee; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (5 February 2013). "Modelling the reduced xanthine oxidase in active sulfo and inactive desulfo forms". Dalton Transactions. 42 (9): 3050–3058. doi:10.1039/c2dt32309e. PMID23299556.
^Pal, Kuntal; Chaudhury, Pradeep K.; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (3 August 2007). "Structure of the Michaelis Complex and Function of the Catalytic Center in the Reductive Half-Reaction of Computational and Synthetic Models of Sulfite Oxidase". Chemistry: An Asian Journal. 2 (8): 956–964. doi:10.1002/asia.200700020. ISSN1861-471X. PMID17600788.
^Bhattacharya, Dibyendu; Maji, Suman; Pal, Kuntal; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (1 May 2008). "Formation of Superoxide Anion on Aerial Oxidation of Cu(II)–Porphyrinogen in the Synthesis of Tetrakis(cyclohexyl)porphyrinogenCu(III) Anion". Inorganic Chemistry. 47 (12): 5036–5038. doi:10.1021/ic800282j. PMID18447338.
^Sarkar, S.; Mishra, S. B. S. (1 September 1984). "Synthetic aspects of CuMos systems and their possible relevance to copper—molybdenum antagonism". Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 59: 239–264. doi:10.1016/0010-8545(84)85056-0.
^Ghosh, Mitrajit; Sonkar, Sumit Kumar; Saxena, Manav; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (18 November 2011). "Carbon Nano-onions for Imaging the Life Cycle of Drosophila Melanogaster". Small. 7 (22): 3170–3177. doi:10.1002/smll.201101158. ISSN1613-6829. PMID22012886.
^Sonkar, Sumit Kumar; Roy, Manas; Babar, Dipak Gorakh; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (26 November 2012). "Water soluble carbon nano-onions from wood wool as growth promoters for gram plants". Nanoscale. 4 (24): 7670–7675. Bibcode:2012Nanos...4.7670S. doi:10.1039/c2nr32408c. PMID23099536.
^Sonkar, Sumit Kumar; Ghosh, Mitrajit; Roy, Manas; Begum, Ameerunisha; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (1 June 2012). "Carbon Nano-Onions as Nontoxic and High-Fluorescence Bioimaging Agent in Food Chain—An In Vivo Study from Unicellular E. coli to Multicellular C. elegans". Materials Express. 2 (2): 105–114. doi:10.1166/mex.2012.1064. S2CID100916037.
^Samadhiya, N.K.; Banerjee, Deepankar; Sarkar, Sabyasachi (2009). Jain, K.K. (ed.). Characterization of the dust in the ambience of the Taj Mahal, Agra. Agam Kala Prakashan. pp. 25–30.