Adrian Ponce

Adrian Ponce (born 12 March 1971) is the manager for the Higher Education outreach group and former Deputy Section Manager for the Planetary Science and Life Detection Section at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and is also a visiting faculty member at Caltech.[1] He received a BS in Chemistry from Michigan State University, and then went on to obtain a PhD in Chemistry from Caltech in 2000.[2]

Research

The Ponce Group is an interdisciplinary team composed of members from both the California Institute of Technology and the NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory that integrates microbiology, chemistry, biophotonics, and engineering principles to develop chemical and biological detection schemes and corresponding analytical instrumentation.[3]

Publications

  • Fast sterility assessment with germinable endospore biodosimetry. Yung, P. T., Ponce, A. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, accepted.
  • Production and characterization of pure spore suspensions of Clostridium sporogenes and C. hungatei. Yang, W., Crow-Willard, E., Ponce, A. Applied Microbiology, in press.
  • Spectroscopic analysis of ligand binding to lanthanide-macrocycle platforms. Kirby, J. P., Cable, M. L., Levine, D. J., Gray, H. B., Ponce, A. Analytical Chemistry, 2008, 80(15), 5750–5754.
  • Bacterial diversity in hyperarid Atacama Desert soils. Connon, S. A., Lester, E. D., Shafaat, H. S., Obenhuber, D. C., Ponce, A., Journal of Geophysical Research, 2007, 112(G4): Article No. G04S17.
  • An automated front-end monitor for anthrax surveillance systems based on the rapid detection of airborne endospores. Yung, P. T., Lester, E. D., Bearman, G., Ponce, A., Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 2007, 98(4), 864–871.
  • Bacterial spore detection by [Tb3+(macrocycle)(dipicolinate)] luminescence. Cable, M. L., Kirby, J. P., Sorasaenee, K., Gray, H. B., Ponce, A., Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2007, 129, 1474–1475.
  • Quantification of viable endospores from a Greenland ice core. Yung, P. T., Shafaat, H. S., Connon, S. A., Ponce, A., FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2007, 59, 300–306.
  • Microflora of extreme arid Atacama Desert Soils. Lester, E. D., Satomi, M., Ponce, A., Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 2007, 39, 704–708.
  • Applications of a rapid endospore viability assay for monitoring UV inactivation and characterizing Arctic ice cores. Shafaat, H. S., Ponce, A., Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2006, 72(10), 6808–6814.
  • A Rapid Single Spore Enumeration Assay. Yung, P. T., Kempf, M. J., Ponce, A., IEEE Aerospace Conference 2006.
  • Towards an In-Situ Endospore Detection Instrument. Shafaat, H. S.; Cable, M. L.; Ikeda, M. K.; Kirby, J. P.; Pelletier, C. C.; Ponce, A., IEEE Aerospace Conference 2005.
  • A Second-Generation Anthrax "Smoke Detector": An Inexpensive Front-End Monitor that Detects Airborne Bacterial Spores. Lester, E. D.; Bearman, G.; Ponce, A., IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 2004, 23 (1), 130–135.
  • An Anthrax Smoke Detector: Online Detection of Aerosolized Bacterial Spores. Lester, E. D.; Ponce, A., IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology: Special Biodefense Issue, 2002, 21 (5), 38–42.
  • Lateral-Flow Immunoassay With DPA-Triggered Tb Luminescence. Ponce, A. NASA Tech Briefs, 2002 (accepted).
  • Live/Dead Spore Assay Using DPA-Triggered Tb Luminescence. Ponce, A. NASA Tech Briefs, 2002 (accepted).
  • Online Detection of Trace H2S(g): UV Absorption Spectroscopy of Gas Phase Cu(COD)(HFAC) Sulfidation Product (HFAC(g)). Ponce, A.; Pikramenou, Z.; Winnpenny, R.; Davidson, M. Anal. Chem., 2002 (in preparation).
  • Bacterial Endospore Quantification using Lanthanide Dipicolinate Luminescence. Ponce, A.; Venkateswaran, K. J., NASA Tech Briefs, 2002, 26(7), 56.
  • Tiger Fiber: Long Period Fiber Grating Sensor with Modulated Plastic Coating for Environmental Monitoring. Kossakovski, D.; Ponce, A, NASA Tech Briefs, 2002 accepted.
  • Fiber-Optic Transducers for Distributed Sensing of Volatiles: An Optical Nose. Ponce, A.; Kossakovski, D., NASA Tech Briefs, 2001, 25(6), 33–34.
  • Electron Tunneling in Water: Oxidative Quenching of Electronically Excited Ru(tpy)22+ (tpy = 2,2':6,2' '-terpyridine) by Ferric Ions in Aqueous Glasses at 77 K. Ponce, A.; Winkler, J. R.; Gray, H. B., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2000, 122, 8187–8191.
  • Electron Transfer in Ruthenium Modified High Potential Iron-Sulfur Protein. Ponce, A.; Di Bilio, A. J.; Winkler, J. R.; Gray, H. B.; Babini, E.; Bertini, I.; Borsari, M.; Capozzi, F.; Luchinat, C. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2000, 122, 4532–4533.
  • "Electron Transfer in Proteins and Water". Ponce, A; Thesis, 2000, California Institute of Technology.
  • pH Dependent Excited-State Dynamics of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ Modified Amino Acids. Geiser, B,; Ponce, A.; Alsfasser, R. Inorg. Chem., 1999, 38, 2030–2037.
  • Electron Transfer in Strongly Coupled Ruthenium Dimers. Ponce, A.; Bachrach, M.; Farmer, P. J.; Winkler, J. R. Inorg. Chim. Acta (Special Issue), 1996, 243, 135–140.
  • Substrate Induced Phosphorescence from Cyclodextrin/Lumophore Host–Guest Complexes. Hartman, W.; Gray, M.; Ponce, A.; Wong, P. A.; Nocera D. G. Inorg. Chim. Acta (Special Issue), 1996, 243, 239–248.
  • Hydroxylamine, Hydrazine, and Diazene as Unidentate Ligands in Osmium and Ruthenium Complexes. Cheng, T. Y.; Ponce, A.; Rheingold, A. L.; Hillhouse, G. L. Angew. Chem., 1994, 33, 657–659.
  • Luminescence from Supramolecules Triggered by the Molecular Recognition of Substrates. Pikramenou, Z.; Yu, J. A.; Lessard, R. B.; Ponce, A.; Wong, P. A.; Nocera, D. G. Coord. Chem. Rev., 1994, 132, 181–194.
  • Intense Phosphorescence Triggered by Alcohols upon Formation of a Cyclodextrin Ternary Complex. Ponce, A.; Wong, P. A.; Way, J. J.; Nocera, D. G. J. Phys. Chem., 1993, 97, 11137–1114, DOI:10.1021/j100144a040

References


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