T. Goslinski obtained his MSc degree from Poznan University of Medical Sciences in 1997 and PhD degree from Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences in 2003. In 2004 he received a 2-year Marie Curie EIF Fellowship to join as a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow the group of Professor Anthony G.M. Barrett at Imperial College London, United Kingdom. As a British Council and Polish Ministry of Higher Education Research Fellow, he visited Imperial College London in 2007 and 2008. Since 2006 he has been working as an Adjunct Assistant Professor at Poznan University of Medical Sciences and Head of the Department from 2012. His research interests include nucleoside chemistry, synthesis and characterization of porphyrazine and phthalocyanine macrocycles.
PhD thesis: "Studies on crystal chemistry of multicomponent crystals formed by organic compounds", Poznan 2013
Her research is focused on modification of properties of API through synthesis of multicomponent systems e.g. cocrystals or solvates. X-ray diffraction of mono- and polycrystalline samples is the main research technique.
PhD thesis: "Porphyrazines for potential application in cytochromes biomimetic - synthesis and pysico-chemical characteristics"
The scope of his interest is synthesis and characterization of novel maleonitriles and porphyrazines possessing peripheral pyrrolyl substituents with iron cation inside the macrocyclic core and also synthesis of porphyrinoids as potential chelators fo potential application as catalsts.
Graduated from Poznan University of Medical Sciences with an MSc degree in Medical Biotechnology. MSc thesis: "Porphyrazines with developed peripheral groups - synthesis, physicochemical characteristic and potential applications in bionanotechnology."
Currently, a doctoral student as a part of NanoBioTech interdisciplinary doctoral studies programme.
Graduated from Poznan University of Medical Sciences with an MSc degree in Pharmacy. MSc thesis: "Syntesis and roentgen structural analysis of glicyrrhetinic acid derivates with potential pharmacological activity."
Graduated from Poznan University of Medical Sciences with an MSc degree in Pharmacy. MSc thesis: "Synthesis of methoxylic and hydroxylic trans-stilben derivates, as well as their activity assesment on cytochrome P450-dependant aromatase."
Currently, a doctoral student as a part of NanoBioTech interdisciplinary doctoral studies programme.