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Dive into the research topics where Gerry A. Griffith is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerry A. Griffith.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Cu-Catalyzed N-Alkynylation of Imidazoles, Benzimidazoles, Indazoles, and Pyrazoles Using PEG as Solvent Medium

Glenn A. Burley; David L. Davies; Gerry A. Griffith; Michael Lee; Kuldip Singh

A facile and efficient Cu(I)-catalyzed cross-coupling method is reported for the preparation of N-alkynyl or N-bromoalkenyl heteroarenes from bromoalkynes. Generally superior yields and functional group tolerance were obtained with microwave (MW) irradiation using imidazole, benzimidazole, pyrazole, and indazole substrates and poly(ethylene glycol) 400 (PEG400) as an additive. We speculate that PEG400 acts as both a Cu(I)-stabilizing ligand as well as a phase transfer solvent.


Small | 2012

Highly Size‐ and Shape‐Controlled Synthesis of Silver Nanoparticles via a Templated Tollens Reaction

Ruggero Dondi; Wu Su; Gerry A. Griffith; Graham Clark; Glenn A. Burley

A mild, facile one-step synthetic strategy for the preparation of size-and shape-controlled silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) is presented. The high degree of size-and shape-control of these AgNPs is achieved by the use of triazole sugar ligands scaffolded by a central resorcinol ether core. Both the triazoles and the resorcinol ether core mediate the nucleation, growth, and passivation phases of the preparation of AgNP in the presence of the Tollens reagent as the silver source. Kinetic and 1H NMR titration data is presented describing the nature of the interactions between the Tollens reagent and these ligands.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

The Mechanism of Formation of N-Formylkynurenine by Heme Dioxygenases

J Basran; Igor Efimov; Nishma Chauhan; Sarah J. Thackray; James L. Krupa; Graham Eaton; Gerry A. Griffith; Christopher G. Mowat; Sandeep Handa; Emma Lloyd Raven

Heme dioxygenases catalyze the oxidation of l-tryptophan to N-formylkynurenine (NFK), the first and rate-limiting step in tryptophan catabolism. Although recent progress has been made on early stages in the mechanism, there is currently no experimental data on the mechanism of product (NFK) formation. In this work, we have used mass spectrometry to examine product formation in a number of dioxygenases. In addition to NFK formation (m/z = 237), the data identify a species (m/z = 221) that is consistent with insertion of a single atom of oxygen into the substrate during O2-driven turnover. The fragmentation pattern for this m/z = 221 species is consistent with a cyclic amino acetal structure; independent chemical synthesis of the 3a-hydroxypyrroloindole-2-carboxylic acid compound is in agreement with this assignment. Labeling experiments with 18O2 confirm the origin of the oxygen atom as arising from O2-dependent turnover. These data suggest that the dioxygenases use a ring-opening mechanism during NFK formation, rather than Criegee or dioxetane mechanisms as previously proposed.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2005

Towards novel difluorinated sugar mimetics; syntheses and conformational analyses of highly-functionalised difluorinated cyclooctenones

Gerry A. Griffith; Jonathan M. Percy; Stéphane Pintat; Clive A. Smith; Neil Spencer; Emi Uneyama

Highly-functionalised difluorinated cyclooctenones were synthesised from trifluoroethanol using either metallated difluoroenol acetal or carbamate chemistry, followed by a [2,3]-Wittig rearrangement or aldol reaction. Efficient RCM reactions afforded the title compounds which showed rather restricted fluxional behaviour by VT (19)F NMR. Topological characterisation by molecular modelling and NOESY/ROESY experiments offered a number of challenges, but allowed the identification of two favoured boat-chair conformers which interconverted by pseudorotation with relatively large activation barriers.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2005

Highly-functionalised difluorinated cyclohexane polyols via the Diels–Alder reaction: regiochemical control via the phenylsulfonyl group

Patrick Jelf Crowley; John Fawcett; Gerry A. Griffith; Andrew C. Moralee; Jonathan M. Percy; Vittoria Salafia

A difluorinated dienophile underwent cycloaddition reactions with a range of furans to afford cycloadducts which could be processed regio- and stereoselectively via episulfonium ions, generated by the reaction between their alkenyl groups and phenylsulfenyl chloride. The oxabicyclic products were oxidised to the phenylsulfonyl level and ring opened via E1(C)B or reductive desulfonative pathways to afford, ultimately, difluorinated cyclohexene or cyclohexane polyols.


Chemical Communications | 2004

A stereodivergent asymmetric approach to difluorinated aldonic acidsElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: preparation of 1 and 2a, NMR and electrospray for 14 (deuterium exchanged), chiral HPLC traces for 7a and 7b, optical rotations for 7a?8b. See http://www.rsc.org/suppdata/cc/b4/b405067c/

Christophe Audouard; Igor L. Barsukov; John Fawcett; Gerry A. Griffith; Jonathan M. Percy; Stphane Pintat; Clive A. Smith

A (bromodifluoromethyl)alkyne has been deployed in a stereoselective route to difluorinated aldonic acid analogues, in which a Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation reaction and diastereoisomer separation set the stage for phenyl group oxidation.


Scopus | 2011

The mechanism of formation of N -formylkynurenine by heme dioxygenases

J Basran; Igor Efimov; Nishma Chauhan; Jl Krupa; Graham Eaton; Gerry A. Griffith; Sandeep Handa; Emma Lloyd Raven; Sarah J. Thackray; Christopher G. Mowat

Heme dioxygenases catalyze the oxidation of l-tryptophan to N-formylkynurenine (NFK), the first and rate-limiting step in tryptophan catabolism. Although recent progress has been made on early stages in the mechanism, there is currently no experimental data on the mechanism of product (NFK) formation. In this work, we have used mass spectrometry to examine product formation in a number of dioxygenases. In addition to NFK formation (m/z = 237), the data identify a species (m/z = 221) that is consistent with insertion of a single atom of oxygen into the substrate during O2-driven turnover. The fragmentation pattern for this m/z = 221 species is consistent with a cyclic amino acetal structure; independent chemical synthesis of the 3a-hydroxypyrroloindole-2-carboxylic acid compound is in agreement with this assignment. Labeling experiments with 18O2 confirm the origin of the oxygen atom as arising from O2-dependent turnover. These data suggest that the dioxygenases use a ring-opening mechanism during NFK formation, rather than Criegee or dioxetane mechanisms as previously proposed.


PubMed | 2011

The mechanism of formation of N-formylkynurenine by heme dioxygenases.

J Basran; Igor Efimov; Nishma Chauhan; Sarah J. Thackray; Jl Krupa; Graham Eaton; Gerry A. Griffith; Christopher G. Mowat; Sandeep Handa; Emma Lloyd Raven

Heme dioxygenases catalyze the oxidation of l-tryptophan to N-formylkynurenine (NFK), the first and rate-limiting step in tryptophan catabolism. Although recent progress has been made on early stages in the mechanism, there is currently no experimental data on the mechanism of product (NFK) formation. In this work, we have used mass spectrometry to examine product formation in a number of dioxygenases. In addition to NFK formation (m/z = 237), the data identify a species (m/z = 221) that is consistent with insertion of a single atom of oxygen into the substrate during O2-driven turnover. The fragmentation pattern for this m/z = 221 species is consistent with a cyclic amino acetal structure; independent chemical synthesis of the 3a-hydroxypyrroloindole-2-carboxylic acid compound is in agreement with this assignment. Labeling experiments with 18O2 confirm the origin of the oxygen atom as arising from O2-dependent turnover. These data suggest that the dioxygenases use a ring-opening mechanism during NFK formation, rather than Criegee or dioxetane mechanisms as previously proposed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006

Interplay of structure and reactivity in a most unusual furan Diels-Alder reaction.

Gerry A. Griffith; Ian H. Hillier; Andrew C. Moralee; Jonathan M. Percy; and Ricard Roig; Mark A. Vincent


Organic Letters | 2004

A potentially divergent and rapid route to analogues of deoxycyclitols, pentopyranoses, 6-deoxyhexoses, and hexoses.

Christophe Audouard; John Fawcett; Gerry A. Griffith; Erwan Kerouredan; Afjal H. Miah; Jonathan M. Percy; Hongli Yang

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John Fawcett

University of Leicester

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Graham Eaton

University of Leicester

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Igor Efimov

University of Leicester

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J Basran

University of Edinburgh

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