Catherine Adam
University of Edinburgh
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Publication
Featured researches published by Catherine Adam.
Nature Chemistry | 2013
Lixu Yang; Catherine Adam; Gary S. Nichol; Scott L. Cockroft
The emergent properties that arise from self-assembly and molecular recognition phenomena are a direct consequence of non-covalent interactions. Gas-phase measurements and computational methods point to the dominance of dispersion forces in molecular association, but solvent effects complicate the unambiguous quantification of these forces in solution. Here, we have used synthetic molecular balances to measure interactions between apolar alkyl chains in 31 organic, fluorous and aqueous solvent environments. The experimental interaction energies are an order of magnitude smaller than estimates of dispersion forces between alkyl chains that have been derived from vaporization enthalpies and dispersion-corrected calculations. Instead, it was found that cohesive solvent-solvent interactions are the major driving force behind apolar association in solution. The results suggest that theoretical models that implicate important roles for dispersion forces in molecular recognition events should be interpreted with caution in solvent-accessible systems.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Lixu Yang; Catherine Adam; Scott L. Cockroft
The hydrophobic effect plays a central role in determining the structure, activity, and properties of biomolecules and materials. In contrast, the general manifestation of this phenomenon in other solvents—the solvophobic effect—although widely invoked, is currently poorly defined because of the lack of a universally accepted descriptor. Here we have used synthetic molecular balances to measure solvent effects on aromatic, aliphatic, and fluorous nonpolar interactions. Our solvent screening data combined with independent experimental measurements of supramolecular association, single-molecule folding, and bulk phase transfer energies were all found to correlate well with the cohesive energy density (ced) of the solvent. Meanwhile, other measures of solvent cohesion, such as surface tension and internal pressure, gave inferior correlations. Thus, we establish ced as a readily accessible, quantitative descriptor of solvophobic association in a range of chemical contexts.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Catherine Adam; Lixu Yang; Scott L. Cockroft
Fluorocarbons often have distinct miscibility properties compared to their nonfluorinated analogues. These differences may be attributed to van der Waals dispersion forces or solvophobic effects, but their contributions are notoriously difficult to separate in molecular recognition processes. Here, molecular torsion balances were used to compare cohesive alkyl and perfluoroalkyl interactions in a range of solvents. A simple linear regression enabled the energetic partitioning of solvophobic and van der Waals forces in the self-association of apolar chains. The contributions of dispersion interactions in apolar cohesion were found to be strongly attenuated in solution compared to the gas phase, but still play a major role in fluorous and organic solvents. In contrast, solvophobic effects were found to be dominant in driving the association of apolar chains in aqueous solution. The results are expected to assist the computational modelling of van der Waals forces in solution.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Jennifer E. Jones; Vincent Diemer; Catherine Adam; James Raftery; Rebecca E. Ruscoe; Jason T. Sengel; Mark I. Wallace; Antoine Bader; Scott L. Cockroft; Jonathan Clayden; Simon J. Webb
The synthetic biology toolbox lacks extendable and conformationally controllable yet easy-to-synthesize building blocks that are long enough to span membranes. To meet this need, an iterative synthesis of α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) oligomers was used to create a library of homologous rigid-rod 310-helical foldamers, which have incrementally increasing lengths and functionalizable N- and C-termini. This library was used to probe the inter-relationship of foldamer length, self-association strength, and ionophoric ability, which is poorly understood. Although foldamer self-association in nonpolar chloroform increased with length, with a ∼14-fold increase in dimerization constant from Aib6 to Aib11, ionophoric activity in bilayers showed a stronger length dependence, with the observed rate constant for Aib11 ∼70-fold greater than that of Aib6. The strongest ionophoric activity was observed for foldamers with >10 Aib residues, which have end-to-end distances greater than the hydrophobic width of the bilayers used (∼2.8 nm); X-ray crystallography showed that Aib11 is 2.93 nm long. These studies suggest that being long enough to span the membrane is more important for good ionophoric activity than strong self-association in the bilayer. Planar bilayer conductance measurements showed that Aib11 and Aib13, but not Aib7, could form pores. This pore-forming behavior is strong evidence that Aibm (m ≥ 10) building blocks can span bilayers.
American Chemical Society. Journal. 2016;. | 2016
Jennifer E. Jones; Vincent Diemer; Catherine Adam; James Raftery; R. Ruscoe; Jason T. Sengel; Mark I. Wallace; Antoine Bader; Scott L. Cockroft; Jonathan Clayden; Simon J. Webb
The synthetic biology toolbox lacks extendable and conformationally controllable yet easy-to-synthesize building blocks that are long enough to span membranes. To meet this need, an iterative synthesis of α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) oligomers was used to create a library of homologous rigid-rod 310-helical foldamers, which have incrementally increasing lengths and functionalizable N- and C-termini. This library was used to probe the inter-relationship of foldamer length, self-association strength, and ionophoric ability, which is poorly understood. Although foldamer self-association in nonpolar chloroform increased with length, with a ∼14-fold increase in dimerization constant from Aib6 to Aib11, ionophoric activity in bilayers showed a stronger length dependence, with the observed rate constant for Aib11 ∼70-fold greater than that of Aib6. The strongest ionophoric activity was observed for foldamers with >10 Aib residues, which have end-to-end distances greater than the hydrophobic width of the bilayers used (∼2.8 nm); X-ray crystallography showed that Aib11 is 2.93 nm long. These studies suggest that being long enough to span the membrane is more important for good ionophoric activity than strong self-association in the bilayer. Planar bilayer conductance measurements showed that Aib11 and Aib13, but not Aib7, could form pores. This pore-forming behavior is strong evidence that Aibm (m ≥ 10) building blocks can span bilayers.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Kamila Barbara Muchowska; Catherine Adam; Ioulia K. Mati; Scott L. Cockroft
Solvent effects are implicated as playing a major role in modulating electrostatic interactions via through-space and polarization effects, but these phenomena are often hard to dissect. By using synthetic molecular torsion balances and a simple explicit solvation model, we demonstrate that the solvation of substituents substantially affects the electrostatic potential of aromatic rings. Although polarization effects are important, we show that a simple additive through-space model also provides a reasonable account of the experimental data. The results deliver insights into solvent structure and might contribute to the development of computationally inexpensive solvent models.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Ana M. Pérez-López; Belén Rubio-Ruiz; Victor Sebastian; Lloyd Hamilton; Catherine Adam; Thomas L. Bray; Silvia Irusta; Paul Brennan; Guy C. Lloyd-Jones; Dirk Sieger; Jesus Santamaria; Asier Unciti-Broceta
Abstract Recent advances in bioorthogonal catalysis are increasing the capacity of researchers to manipulate the fate of molecules in complex biological systems. A bioorthogonal uncaging strategy is presented, which is triggered by heterogeneous gold catalysis and facilitates the activation of a structurally diverse range of therapeutics in cancer cell culture. Furthermore, this solid‐supported catalytic system enabled locally controlled release of a fluorescent dye into the brain of a zebrafish for the first time, offering a novel way to modulate the activity of bioorthogonal reagents in the most fragile and complex organs.
Chemical Science | 2013
Ioulia K. Mati; Catherine Adam; Scott L. Cockroft
The study of molecular interactions is often complicated by solvent effects. Here we have used a series of 11 synthetic molecular balances to measure solvent and substituent effects on the positions of conformational equilibria in 13 different solvents. Despite the simplicity of the model system, surprisingly complicated behaviour was seen to emerge from the interplay of conformational, intramolecular and solvent effects. Nonetheless, 138 experimental conformational free energies were analysed using a simple solvent model, which was able to account for both the major and more unusual patterns observed. The success of the solvent model can be attributed to its ability to facilitate consideration of individual intramolecular and solute–solvent interactions, as confirmed by comparison with NMR chemical shifts and DFT calculations. The approach provides a means of dissecting electrostatic and solvent effects to reveal pseudo gas-phase behaviour from experimental data obtained in solution. For example, the method facilitated the identification of an unexpected, but highly favourable CO⋯NO2 interaction worth up to 3.6 kJ mol−1, which was shown not to be driven by solvent effects.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Nicholas Dominelli-Whiteley; James John Brown; Kamila Barbara Muchowska; Ioulia K. Mati; Catherine Adam; Thomas A. Hubbard; Alex Elmi; Alisdair James Brown; Ian Alexander Weston Bell; Scott L. Cockroft
Abstract Chains of hydrogen bonds such as those found in water and proteins are often presumed to be more stable than the sum of the individual H bonds. However, the energetics of cooperativity are complicated by solvent effects and the dynamics of intermolecular interactions, meaning that information on cooperativity typically is derived from theory or indirect structural data. Herein, we present direct measurements of energetic cooperativity in an experimental system in which the geometry and the number of H bonds in a chain were systematically controlled. Strikingly, we found that adding a second H‐bond donor to form a chain can almost double the strength of the terminal H bond, while further extensions have little effect. The experimental observations add weight to computations which have suggested that strong, but short‐range cooperative effects may occur in H‐bond chains.
Neuro-oncology | 2018
Catherine Adam; Belén Rubio-Ruiz; Jason T. Weiss; Paul E. Brennan; Asier Unciti-Broceta