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Featured researches published by Katye M. Poole.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

New Fe4, Fe6, and Fe8 Clusters of Iron(III) from the Use of 2-Pyridyl Alcohols: Structural, Magnetic, and Computational Characterization

Taketo Taguchi; Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Khalil A. Abboud; Candace M. Jones; Katye M. Poole; Ted A. O'brien; George Christou

The syntheses, crystal structures, magnetochemical characterization, and theoretical calculations are reported for three new iron clusters [Fe 6O 2(NO3) 4(hmp) 8(H 2O) 2](NO3)2 (1), [Fe4(N3)6(hmp)6] (2), and [Fe8O3(OMe)(pdm)4(pdmH) 4(MeOH)2](ClO4)5 (3) (hmpH=2-(hydroxymethyl)pyridine; pdmH2=2,6-pyridinedimethanol). The reaction of hmpH with iron(III) sources such as Fe(NO3) 3.9H2O in the presence of NEt 3 gave 1, whereas 2 was obtained from a similar reaction by adding an excess of NaN3. Complex 3 was obtained in good yield from the reaction of pdmH 2 with Fe(ClO4)3.6H2O in MeOH in the presence of an organic base. The complexes all possess extremely rare or novel core topologies. The core of 1 comprises two oxide-centered [Fe3(mu3-O)](7+) triangular units linked together at two of their apexes by two sets of alkoxide arms of hmp(-) ligands. Complex 2 contains a zigzag array of four Fe (III) atoms within an [Fe4(mu-OR) 6](6+) core, with the azide groups all bound terminally. Finally, complex 3 contains a central [Fe 4(mu4-O)](10+) tetrahedron linked to two oxide-centered [Fe3(mu3-O)](7+) triangular units. Variable-temperature, solid-state dc and ac magnetization studies were carried out on complexes 1-3 in the 5.0-300 K range. Fitting of the obtained magnetization versus field (H) and temperature (T) data by matrix diagonalization and including only axial anisotropy (zero-field splitting, ZFS) established that 1 possesses an S=3 ground-state spin, with g=2.08, and D=-0.44 cm(-1). The magnetic susceptibility data for 2 up to 300 K were fit by matrix diagonalization and gave J1=-9.2 cm(-1), J2=-12.5 cm(-1), and g=2.079, where J 1 and J 2 are the outer and middle nearest-neighbor exchange interactions, respectively. Thus, the interactions between the Fe(III) centers are all antiferromagnetic, giving an S=0 ground state for 2. Similarly, complex 3 was found to have an S=0 ground state. Theoretically computed values of the exchange constants in 2 were obtained with DFT calculations and the ZILSH method and were in good agreement with the values obtained from the experimental data. Exchange constants obtained with ZILSH for 3 successfully rationalized the experimental S = 0 ground state. The combined work demonstrates the ligating flexibility of pyridyl-alcohol chelates and their usefulness in the synthesis of new polynuclear Fex clusters without requiring the copresence of carboxylate ligands.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Spin Maximization: Switching of the Usual S = 11 State of MnII4MnIII3 Disklike Complexes to the Maximum S = 16

Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Katye M. Poole; Dolos Foguet-Albiol; Khalil A. Abboud; Ted A. O'brien; George Christou

The S = 11 ground states of the Mn 7 family of mixed-valence complexes with a metal-centered hexagonal topology have been found by density functional theory calculations to arise by spin frustration involving small differences in the magnitudes of the two weakest interactions controlling the alignment of the central spin. Targeted structural perturbation has allowed a complex with the central spin flipped to be discovered, which thus possesses the maximum S = 16 ground state.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Effects of Hinge-region Natural Polymorphisms on Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Type 1 Protease Structure, Dynamics, and Drug Pressure Evolution.

Zhanglong Liu; Xi Huang; Lingna Hu; Linh Pham; Katye M. Poole; Yan Tang; Brian P. Mahon; Wenxing Tang; Kunhua Li; Nathan E. Goldfarb; Ben M. Dunn; Robert McKenna; Gail E. Fanucci

Multidrug resistance to current Food and Drug Administration-approved HIV-1 protease (PR) inhibitors drives the need to understand the fundamental mechanisms of how drug pressure-selected mutations, which are oftentimes natural polymorphisms, elicit their effect on enzyme function and resistance. Here, the impacts of the hinge-region natural polymorphism at residue 35, glutamate to aspartate (E35D), alone and in conjunction with residue 57, arginine to lysine (R57K), are characterized with the goal of understanding how altered salt bridge interactions between the hinge and flap regions are associated with changes in structure, motional dynamics, conformational sampling, kinetic parameters, and inhibitor affinity. The combined results reveal that the single E35D substitution leads to diminished salt bridge interactions between residues 35 and 57 and gives rise to the stabilization of open-like conformational states with overall increased backbone dynamics. In HIV-1 PR constructs where sites 35 and 57 are both mutated (e.g. E35D and R57K), x-ray structures reveal an altered network of interactions that replace the salt bridge thus stabilizing the structural integrity between the flap and hinge regions. Despite the altered conformational sampling and dynamics when the salt bridge is disrupted, enzyme kinetic parameters and inhibition constants are similar to those obtained for subtype B PR. Results demonstrate that these hinge-region natural polymorphisms, which may arise as drug pressure secondary mutations, alter protein dynamics and the conformational landscape, which are important thermodynamic parameters to consider for development of inhibitors that target for non-subtype B PR.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

High-Spin Mn4 and Mn10 Molecules: Large Spin Changes with Structure in Mixed-Valence MnII4MnIII6 Clusters with Azide and Alkoxide-Based Ligands

Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Katye M. Poole; Khalil A. Abboud; Wolfgang Wernsdorfer; Ted A. O’Brien; George Christou


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Spin Maximization from S=11 to S=16 in Mn7 Disk-Like Clusters: Spin Frustration Effects and Their Computational Rationalization

Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Dolos Foguet-Albiol; Katye M. Poole; Wolfgang Wernsdorfer; Khalil A. Abboud; Ted A. O'brien; George Christou


Dalton Transactions | 2014

A new family of Ln7 clusters with an ideal D3h metal-centered trigonal prismatic geometry, and SMM and photoluminescence behaviors†

Eleni C. Mazarakioti; Katye M. Poole; Luís Cunha-Silva; George Christou; Theocharis C. Stamatatos


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

High-yield syntheses and reactivity studies of Fe10 "ferric wheels": structural, magnetic, and computational characterization of a star-shaped Fe8 complex.

Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Alexander G. Christou; Shreya Mukherjee; Katye M. Poole; Christos Lampropoulos; Khalil A. Abboud; Ted A. O'brien; George Christou


Chemical Communications | 2017

A family of ‘windmill’-like {Cu6Ln12} complexes exhibiting single-molecule magnetism behavior and large magnetic entropy changes

Dimitris Alexandropoulos; Katye M. Poole; Luís Cunha-Silva; Javeed Ahmad Sheikh; Wolfgang Wernsdorfer; George Christou; Theocharis C. Stamatatos


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

A New “Offset” Analogue of the Classical Oxime-Bridged [MnIII6] Single-Molecule Magnets

Katye M. Poole; Maria Korabik; Muhandis Shiddiq; Kylie J. Mitchell; Adeline Fournet; Zhiliang You; George Christou; Stephen Hill; Małgorzata Hołyńska


Polyhedron | 2018

Homometallic {Mn 10 } and heterometallic {Mn 6 Ca 4 } supertetrahedra exhibiting an unprecedented {Mn III 9 Mn II } oxidation state level and heterometal ions distribution

Katerina Skordi; Constantina Papatriantafyllopoulou; Sotiris Zartilas; Katye M. Poole; Vassilios Nastopoulos; George Christou; Anastasios J. Tasiopoulos

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Wolfgang Wernsdorfer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Kunhua Li

University of Florida

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Lingna Hu

University of Florida

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