Cathy D. Moore
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by Cathy D. Moore.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Jung Yoon Lee; Ryan L. Peterson; Kei Ohkubo; Isaac Garcia-Bosch; Richard A. Himes; Julia S. Woertink; Cathy D. Moore; Edward I. Solomon; Shunichi Fukuzumi; Kenneth D. Karlin
To obtain mechanistic insights into the inherent reactivity patterns for copper(I)–O2 adducts, a new cupric–superoxo complex [(DMM-tmpa)CuII(O2•–)]+ (2) [DMM-tmpa = tris((4-methoxy-3,5-dimethylpyridin-2-yl)methyl)amine] has been synthesized and studied in phenol oxidation–oxygenation reactions. Compound 2 is characterized by UV–vis, resonance Raman, and EPR spectroscopies. Its reactions with a series of para-substituted 2,6-di-tert-butylphenols (p-X-DTBPs) afford 2,6-di-tert-butyl-1,4-benzoquinone (DTBQ) in up to 50% yields. Significant deuterium kinetic isotope effects and a positive correlation of second-order rate constants (k2) compared to rate constants for p-X-DTBPs plus cumylperoxyl radical reactions indicate a mechanism that involves rate-limiting hydrogen atom transfer (HAT). A weak correlation of (kBT/e) ln k2 versus Eox of p-X-DTBP indicates that the HAT reactions proceed via a partial transfer of charge rather than a complete transfer of charge in the electron transfer/proton transfer pathway. Product analyses, 18O-labeling experiments, and separate reactivity employing the 2,4,6-tri-tert-butylphenoxyl radical provide further mechanistic insights. After initial HAT, a second molar equiv of 2 couples to the phenoxyl radical initially formed, giving a CuII–OO–(ArO′) intermediate, which proceeds in the case of p-OR-DTBP substrates via a two-electron oxidation reaction involving hydrolysis steps which liberate H2O2 and the corresponding alcohol. By contrast, four-electron oxygenation (O–O cleavage) mainly occurs for p-R-DTBP which gives 18O-labeled DTBQ and elimination of the R group.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Daryl A. Guthrie; Nam Y. Kim; Maxime A. Siegler; Cathy D. Moore; John P. Toscano
Due to its inherent reactivity, nitroxyl (HNO), must be generated in situ through the use of donor compounds, but very few physiologically useful HNO donors exist. Novel N-substituted hydroxylamines with carbon-based leaving groups have been synthesized, and their structures confirmed by X-ray crystallography. These compounds generate HNO under nonenzymatic, physiological conditions, with the rate and amount of HNO released being dependent mainly on the nature of the leaving group. A barbituric acid and a pyrazolone derivative have been developed as efficient HNO donors with half-lives at pH 7.4, 37 °C of 0.7 and 9.5 min, respectively.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Bryan T. Mott; Abhai K. Tripathi; Maxime A. Siegler; Cathy D. Moore; David J. Sullivan; Gary H. Posner
Malaria continues to be a difficult disease to eradicate largely because of the widespread populations it affects and the resistance that malaria parasites have developed against once very potent therapies. The natural product artemisinin has been a boon for antimalarial chemotherapy, as artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) has become the first line of chemotherapy. Because the threat of resistance is always on the horizon, it is imperative to continually identify new treatments, comprising both advanced analogues of all antimalarial drugs, especially artemisinin, and the exploration of novel combinations, ideally with distinct mechanisms of action. Here we report for the first time the synthesis of a series of two-carbon-linked artemisinin-derived dimers, their unique structural features, and demonstration of their antimalarial efficacy via single oral dose administration in two 60-day survival studies of Plasmodium berghei infected mice. Several of the new endoperoxide chemical entities consistently demonstrated excellent antimalarial efficacy, and combinations with two non-peroxide antimalarial drugs have been studied.
Biochemistry | 2013
Gizem Keceli; Cathy D. Moore; Jason W. Labonte; John P. Toscano
Nitroxyl (HNO), a potential heart failure therapeutic, is known to post-translationally modify cysteine residues. Among reactive nitrogen oxide species, the modification of cysteine residues to sulfinamides [RS(O)NH2] is unique to HNO. We have applied (15)N-edited (1)H NMR techniques to detect the HNO-induced thiol to sulfinamide modification in several small organic molecules, peptides, and the cysteine protease, papain. Relevant reactions of sulfinamides involve reduction to free thiols in the presence of excess thiol and hydrolysis to form sulfinic acids [RS(O)OH]. We have investigated sulfinamide hydrolysis at physiological pH and temperature. Studies with papain and a related model peptide containing the active site thiol suggest that sulfinamide hydrolysis can be enhanced in a protein environment. These findings are also supported by modeling studies. In addition, analysis of peptide sulfinamides at various pH values suggests that hydrolysis becomes more facile under acidic conditions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Sunghee Kim; Jake W. Ginsbach; A. Imtiaz Billah; Maxime A. Siegler; Cathy D. Moore; Edward I. Solomon; Kenneth D. Karlin
Current interest in copper/dioxygen reactivity includes the influence of thioether sulfur ligation, as it concerns the formation, structures, and properties of derived copper-dioxygen complexes. Here, we report on the chemistry of {L-CuI}2-(O2) species L = DMMESE, DMMESP, and DMMESDP, which are N3S(thioether)-based ligands varied in the nature of a substituent on the S atom, along with a related N3O(ether) (EOE) ligand. CuI and CuII complexes have been synthesized and crystallographically characterized. Copper(I) complexes are dimeric in the solid state, [{L-CuI}2](B(C6F5)4)2, however are shown by diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy to be mononuclear in solution. Copper(II) complexes with a general formulation [L-CuII(X)]n+ {X = ClO4–, n = 1, or X = H2O, n = 2} exhibit distorted square pyramidal coordination geometries and progressively weaker axial thioether ligation across the series. Oxygenation (−130 °C) of {(DMMESE)CuI}+ results in the formation of a trans-μ-1,2-peroxodicopper(II) species [{(DMMESE)CuII}2(μ-1,2-O22–)]2+ (1P). Weakening the Cu–S bond via a change to the thioether donor found in DMMESP leads to the initial formation of [{(DMMESP)CuII}2(μ-1,2-O22–)]2+ (2P) that subsequently isomerizes to a bis-μ-oxodicopper(III) complex, [{(DMMESP)CuIII}2(μ-O2–)2]2+ (2O), with 2P and 2O in equilibrium (Keq = [2O]/[2P] = 2.6 at −130 °C). Formulations for these Cu/O2 adducts were confirmed by resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopy. This solution mixture is sensitive to the addition of methylsulfonate, which shifts the equilibrium toward the bis-μ-oxo isomer. Further weakening of the Cu–S bond in DMMESDP or substitution with an ether donor in DMMEOE leads to only a bis-μ-oxo species (3O and 4O, respectively). Reactivity studies indicate that the bis-μ-oxodicopper(III) species (2O, 3O) and not the trans-peroxo isomers (1P and 2P) are responsible for the observed ligand sulfoxidation. Our findings concerning the existence of the 2P/2O equilibrium contrast with previously established ligand-CuI/O2 reactivity and possible implications are discussed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Gizem Keceli; Cathy D. Moore; John P. Toscano
Recent discoveries of important pharmacological properties have drawn attention to the reactivity of HNO (azanone, nitroxyl) with biologically relevant substrates. Apart from its role in thiol oxidation, HNO has been reported to have nitrosative properties, for example, with tryptophan resulting in N-nitrosotryptophan formation. We have investigated the reactivity of HNO with tryptophan and small peptides containing either tryptophan or both a tryptophan and a cysteine residue. Our results point to the more reactive nature of cysteine towards HNO compared with tryptophan.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2016
Christopher L. Bianco; Cathy D. Moore; Jon M. Fukuto; John P. Toscano
The discovery of nitric oxide (NO) as an endogenously generated signaling species in mammalian cells has spawned a vast interest in the study of the chemical biology of nitrogen oxides. Of these, nitroxyl (azanone, HNO) has gained much attention for its potential role as a therapeutic for cardiovascular disease. Known targets of HNO include hemes/heme proteins and thiols/thiol-containing proteins. Recently, due to their roles in redox signaling and cellular defense, selenols and selenoproteins have also been speculated to be additional potential targets of HNO. Indeed, as determined in the current work, selenols are targeted by HNO. Such reactions appear to result only in formation of diselenide products, which can be easily reverted back to the free selenol. This characteristic is distinct from the reaction of HNO with thiols/thiolproteins. These findings suggest that, unlike thiolproteins, selenoproteins are resistant to irreversible oxidative modification, support that Nature may have chosen to use selenium instead of sulfur in certain biological systems for its enhanced resistance to electrophilic and oxidative modification.
Biochemistry | 1996
Christopher J. Falzone; Michael Mayer; Eileen L. Whiteman; Cathy D. Moore; Juliette T. J. Lecomte
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Ryan L. Peterson; Jake W. Ginsbach; Ryan E. Cowley; Munzarin F. Qayyum; Richard A. Himes; Maxime A. Siegler; Cathy D. Moore; Britt Hedman; Keith O. Hodgson; Shunichi Fukuzumi; Edward I. Solomon; Kenneth D. Karlin
Biochemistry | 1991
Cathy D. Moore; Ousaima N. Al-Misky; Juliette T. J. Lecomte