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Dive into the research topics where Kevin L. Caran is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin L. Caran.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Bicephalic amphiphile architecture affects antibacterial activity

Jade E. LaDow; David C. Warnock; Kristina M. Hamill; Kaitlin L. Simmons; Robert W. Davis; Christian R. Schwantes; Devon C. Flaherty; Jon A.L. Willcox; Kelsey Wilson-Henjum; Kevin L. Caran; Kevin P. C. Minbiole; Kyle Seifert

A series of cationic amphiphiles, each with an aromatic core, was prepared and investigated for antimicrobial properties. The synthesized amphiphiles in this study are bicephalic (double-headed) in that they each possess two trimethylammonium head groups and a single linear alkoxy tail. Minimum inhibitory and minimum bactericidal concentrations of these amphiphiles were in the low micromolar range. Antimicrobial activities are highly sensitive to the chain length of the hydrophobic region, and modestly reliant on the relative positioning of the head groups on the aromatic core. These trends were more pronounced in time kill assays, wherein longer chain compounds required significantly shorter times to completely kill bacteria. Microscopy suggested that the mode of cell death was lysis. Strong inhibition was observed with both biscationic compounds and monocationic comparisons against Gram-positive bacteria; only biscationic amphiphiles maintained good activity versus the Gram-negative bacteria tested. These observations provide direction for future antimicrobial structural investigations.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Colloidal and antibacterial properties of novel triple-headed, double-tailed amphiphiles: exploring structure-activity relationships and synergistic mixtures.

John Marafino; Tara M. Gallagher; Jhosdyn Barragan; Brandi Volkers; Jade E. LaDow; Kyle Bonifer; Gabriel Fitzgerald; Jason L. Floyd; Kristin McKenna; Nicholas T. Minahan; Brenna Walsh; Kyle Seifert; Kevin L. Caran

Two novel series of tris-cationic, tripled-headed, double-tailed amphiphiles were synthesized and the effects of tail length and head group composition on the critical aggregation concentration (CAC), thermodynamic parameters, and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) against six bacterial strains were investigated. Synergistic antibacterial combinations of these amphiphiles were also identified. Amphiphiles in this study are composed of a benzene core with three benzylic ammonium bromide groups, two of which have alkyl chains, each 8-16 carbons in length. The third head group is a trimethylammonium or pyridinium. Log of critical aggregation concentration (log[CAC]) and heat of aggregation (ΔHagg) were both inversely proportional to the length of the linear hydrocarbon chains. Antibacterial activity increases with tail length until an optimal tail length of 12 carbons per chain, above which, activity decreased. The derivatives with two 12 carbon chains had the best antibacterial activity, killing all tested strains at concentrations of 1-2μM for Gram-positive and 4-16μM for Gram-negative bacteria. The identity of the third head group (trimethylammonium or pyridinium) had minimal effect on colloidal and antibacterial activity. The antibacterial activity of several binary combinations of amphiphiles from this study was higher than activity of individual amphiphiles, indicating that these combinations are synergistic. These amphiphiles show promise as novel antibacterial agents that could be used in a variety of applications.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2017

Hydra amphiphiles: Using three heads and one tail to influence aggregate formation and to kill pathogenic bacteria

Tara M. Gallagher; John Marafino; Brenden K. Wimbish; Brandi Volkers; Gabriel Fitzgerald; Kristin McKenna; Jason L. Floyd; Nicholas T. Minahan; Brenna Walsh; Kirstie Thompson; David Bruno; Monica Paneru; Sybelle Djikeng; Stephanie Masters; Suma Haji; Kyle Seifert; Kevin L. Caran

Hydra amphiphiles mimic the morphology of the mythical multi-headed creatures for which they are named. Likewise, when faced with a pathogenic bacterium, some hydra derivatives are as destructive as their fabled counterparts were to their adversaries. This report focuses on eight new tricephalic (triple-headed), single-tailed amphiphiles. Each amphiphile has a mesitylene (1,3,5-trimethylbenzene) core, two benzylic trimethylammonium groups and one dimethylalkylammonium group with a linear hydrophobe ranging from short (C8H17) to ultralong (C22H45). The logarithm of the critical aggregation concentration, log(CAC), decreases linearly with increasing tail length, but with a smaller dependence than that of ionic amphiphiles with fewer head groups. Tail length also affects antibacterial activity; amphiphiles with a linear 18 or 20 carbon atom hydrophobic chain are more effective at killing bacteria than those with shorter or longer chains. Comparison to a recently reported amphiphilic series with three heads and two tails allows for the development of an understanding of the relationship between number of tails and both colloidal and antibacterial properties.


Synthesis and Reactivity in Inorganic and Metal-organic Chemistry | 2003

Kinetics of the Uncatalyzed Hydrostannation of Diethyl Acetylenedicarboxylate

John C. Cochran; Kevin L. Caran; Elizabeth A. Pierz; David M. Miller

Hydrostannation of carbon–carbon triple bonds is usually catalyzed by a free radical initiator or by metal complexes of palladium, molybdenum or rhodium. However, when the triple bond is substituted with an effective electron‐withdrawing group, the addition reaction will proceed in the absence of a catalyst. In this paper we report the kinetics of hydrostannation of diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate, (1), with trimethylstannane (2a), tri‐n‐propylstannane (2b), tri‐n‐butylstannane (2c), and triphenylstannane, (2d). Rate constants for these reactants were determined in acetonitrile at 25, 35, and 45 °C. Also, rate constants for trimethylstannane and tripropylstannane were determined in cyclohexane and trimethylstannane‐d1 (2e), in acetonitrile. Finally, the hydrostannation with tributylstannane was run at 25, 35, and 45 °C in 95% ethanol. Where appropriate, enthalpies and entropies of activation were determined.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2000

Anatomy of a Gel. Amino Acid Derivatives That Rigidify Water at Submillimolar Concentrations

Fredric M. Menger and; Kevin L. Caran


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002

Gemini-induced columnar jointing in vitreous ice. Cryo-HRSEM as a tool for discovering new colloidal morphologies.

Fredric M. Menger; Hong Zhang; Kevin L. Caran; Victor A. Seredyuk; Robert P. Apkarian


Macromolecules | 1999

High-Resolution Topographic Imaging of Environmentally Responsive, Elastin-Mimetic Hydrogels

R. Andrew McMillan; Kevin L. Caran; and Robert P. Apkarian; Vincent P. Conticello


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

The antibacterial activity of 4,4′-bipyridinium amphiphiles with conventional, bicephalic and gemini architectures

Melissa C. Grenier; Robert W. Davis; Kelsey Wilson-Henjum; Jade E. LaDow; Jacob W. Black; Kevin L. Caran; Kyle Seifert; Kevin P. C. Minbiole


Tetrahedron | 2016

From antimicrobial activity to mechanism of resistance: the multifaceted role of simple quaternary ammonium compounds in bacterial eradication

Kevin P. C. Minbiole; Megan C. Jennings; Laura E. Ator; Jacob W. Black; Melissa C. Grenier; Jade E. LaDow; Kevin L. Caran; Kyle Seifert; William M. Wuest


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002

Depth-profiling with giant vesicle membranes.

Fredric M. Menger; Jason S. Keiper; Kevin L. Caran

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Kyle Seifert

James Madison University

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Jade E. LaDow

James Madison University

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John Marafino

James Madison University

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Brandi Volkers

James Madison University

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Brenna Walsh

James Madison University

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