Publications by authors named "David R Edwards"

Background: With an aging society and raised expectations, joint replacement surgery is likely to increase significantly in the future. The development of postoperative complications following joint replacement surgery (for example, infection, systemic inflammatory response syndrome and deep vein thrombosis) is also likely to increase. Despite considerable progress in orthopaedic surgery, comparing a range of biological markers with the ultimate aim of monitoring or predicting postoperative complications has not yet been extensively researched.

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In the biological fixation of halide ions, several enzymes have been found to catalyze alkyl transfer from S-adenosylmethionine to halide ions. It proves possible to measure the rates of reaction of the trimethylsulfonium ion with I(-), Br(-), Cl(-), F(-), HO(-), and H2O in water at elevated temperatures. Comparison of the resulting second-order rate constants, extrapolated to 25 °C, with the values of k(cat)/K(m) reported for fluorinase and chlorinase indicates that these enzymes enhance the rates of alkyl halide formation by factors of 2 × 10(15)- and 1 × 10(17)-fold, respectively.

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Here we show that a recent computationally designed zinc-mediated protein interface is serendipitously capable of catalyzing carboxyester and phosphoester hydrolysis. Although the original motivation was to design a de novo zinc-mediated protein-protein interaction (called MID1-zinc), we observed in the homodimer crystal structure a small cleft and open zinc coordination site. We investigated if the cleft and zinc site at the designed interface were sufficient for formation of a primitive active site that can perform hydrolysis.

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The hydrolysis of N-methyl O-phenyl sulfamate (1) has been studied as a model for steroid sulfatase inhibitors such as Coumate, 667 Coumate, and EMATE. At neutral pH, simulating physiological conditions, hydrolysis of 1 involves an intramolecular proton transfer from nitrogen to the bridging oxygen atom of the leaving group. Remarkably, this proton transfer is estimated to accelerate the decomposition of 1 by a factor of 10(11).

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The widespread use of phosphorothioate esters as agricultural pesticides, chemical weapons and mechanistic probes in enzymology has sparked interest in the reactivity of these thio-substituted analogues of phosphate esters. In this brief account, we summarize the recent developments in our understanding of the mechanisms of hydrolysis (and solvolysis in methanol) of phosphorothioates containing a sulfur atom in the bridging and/or non-bridging position. A small number of highly efficient catalytic systems containing the metal ions La(III), Pd(II), Cu(II) and Zn(II) have been developed to promote the degradation of the various classes of phosphorothioate esters.

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The final step in the degradation of heparin sulfate involves the enzymatic hydrolysis of its 2-sulfamido groups. To evaluate the power of the corresponding sulfamidases as catalysts, we examined the reaction of N-neopentyl sulfamate at elevated temperatures and found it to undergo specific acid catalyzed hydrolysis even at alkaline pH. A rate constant of 10(-16) s(-1) was calculated using the Eyring equation for water attack on the N-protonated species at pH 7, 25 °C.

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As benchmarks for judging the catalytic power of sulfate monoesterases, we sought to determine the rates of spontaneous hydrolysis of unactivated alkyl sulfate monoesters by S-O bond cleavage. Neopentyl sulfate proved to be unsuitable for this purpose, since it was found to undergo hydrolysis by a C-O bond cleaving mechanism with rearrangement of its carbon skeleton. Instead, we examined the temperature dependence of the spontaneous hydrolyses of aryl sulfate monoesters, which proceed by S-O cleavage.

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The kinetics of the La3+-catalyzed methanolysis of a series of S-aryl methylphosphonothioates (4a-e, phenyl substituents = 3,5-dichloro, 4-chloro, 4-fluoro, 4-H, 4-methoxy) were studied at 25 °C with s(s)pH control. The reaction involves saturation binding of the anionic substrates to dimeric La3+/methoxide catalysts formulated as La2(3+)(-OCH3)x, where x = 2-5 depending on the solution s(s)pH. Cleavage of the La3+-bound methylphosphonothioates is fast, ranging from 5 × 10(-3) s(-1) to 5.

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Methanol solutions containing Cd(II), Mn(II), and a palladacycle, (dimethanol bis(N,N-dimethylbenzylamine-2C,N)palladium(II) (3), are shown to promote the methanolytic transesterification of O-methyl O-4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate (2b) at 25 °C with impressive rate accelerations of 10(6)-10(11) over the background methoxide promoted reaction. A detailed mechanistic investigation of the methanolytic cleavage of 2a-d having various leaving group aryl substitutions, and particularly the 4-nitrophenyl derivative (2b), catalyzed by Pd-complex 3 is presented. Plots of k(obs) versus palladacycle [3] demonstrate strong saturation binding to form 2b:3.

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The methanolytic cleavage of a series of O,O-dimethyl O-aryl phosphorothioates (1a−g) catalyzed by a C,N-palladacycle, (2-[N,N-dimethylamino(methyl)phenyl]-C1,N)(pyridine) palladium(II) triflate (3), at 25 °C and sspH 11.7 in methanol is reported, along with data for the methanolytic cleavage of 1a−g. The methoxide reaction gives a linear log k2−OMe vs sspKa (phenol leaving group) Brønsted plot having a gradient of βlg = −0.

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Purpose: During this pilot clinical study, patients scheduled for elective tourniquet-applied upper limb orthopaedic surgery were recruited to investigate the effects of surgery on various biological markers (n = 10 patients).

Methods: Three venous blood samples were collected from the arm at the ante-cubital fossa, at baseline (pre-operatively), 5 and 15 minutes after reperfusion (post-operatively). Neutrophil and monocyte leukocyte sub-populations were isolated by density gradient centrifugation techniques.

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Background: It is estimated that over 8 million people in the United Kingdom suffer from osteoarthritis. These patients may require orthopaedic surgical intervention to help alleviate their clinical condition. Investigations presented here was to test the hypothesis that total hip replacement (THR) and total knee replacement (TKR) orthopaedic surgery result in changes to leukocyte and endothelial markers thus increasing inflammatory reactions postoperatively.

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To address the question of concerted versus a stepwise reaction mechanisms for the cyclization of the 2-hydroxypropyl aryl and alkyl RNA models (1a-k) promoted by dinuclear Zn(II) complex (4) at (s)spH 9.8 and 25 degrees C, the non-cleavable O-hydroxypropyl phenylphosphonate analogues 6a and 6b were subjected to the catalytic reaction in methanol. These phosphonates did not undergo isomerization in the study, the only observable methanolysis reaction being release of 1,2-propanediol and the formation of O-methyl phenylphosphonate.

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The catalytic methanolysis of a series of dimethyl aryl phosphate triesters where the aryl groups contain an o-methoxycarbonyl (o-CO2Me) substituent (4a-i) was studied at 25 degrees C in methanol containing La3+ at various concentrations and (s)(s)pH. Determination of the second-order rate constant for La3+(2)-catalyzed cleavage of substrate 4a (dimethyl (o-methoxycarbonyl)phenyl phosphate) as a function of (s)(s)pH was assessed in terms of a speciation diagram that showed that the process was catalyzed by La3+(2)(-OCH3)x dimers, where x = 1-5, that exhibit only a 5-fold difference in activity between all the species. The second-order catalytic rate constants (k2(La)) for the catalyzed methanolysis of 4a-i at (s)(s)pH 8.

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The kinetics and cleavage products of 2-hydroxypropyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate were determined in methanol containing the di-Zn(II) complex of bis-1,3-N1,N1'-(1,5,9-triazacyclododecyl)propane (4). Time-dependent 1H NMR spectra of the reaction mixture at sspH 9.8 +/- 0.

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Among established methods for transforming Si-H bonds, carbonyl hydrosilylation and heterodehydrogenative coupling with alcohols catalysed by B(C6F5)3 are shown to provide exceptionally clean routes to the derivatisation of tetra-substituted disilanes such as [Ph2SiH]2, giving no products resulting from Si-Si bond cleavage. Even higher activity is observed for the borane-catalysed dehydrogenative coupling of silanes with alkyl- and arylthiols, the first examples of such Si-S bond formation in the absence of a transition metal catalyst. Clean, quantitative syntheses of a range of thiosilanes are reported, and the lability of the Si-S linkage toward subsequent alcoholysis is investigated.

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A mechanistic study of the epoxidation of aldehydes with sulfur ylides has been carried out. The DeltaG++ of the reaction was determined to be 22.2 kcal/mol at 298 K.

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Background: Monocytes and neutrophils are examples of phagocytic leukocytes, with neutrophils being considered as the 'chief' phagocytic leukocyte. Both monocytes and neutrophils have been implicated to play a key role in the development of ischaemia-reperfusion injury, where they are intrinsically involved in leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions. In this pilot study we hypothesised that mild episodes of tourniquet induced forearm ischaemia-reperfusion injury results in leukocyte activation and changes in inflammatory and coagulation markers.

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The collapse of hydroxysulfonium salts has been examined as a model for the epoxidation of aldehydes. The anti diastereomer reacted with retention of stereochemistry and no crossover, while the syn diastereomer gave crossover products along with cis and trans epoxides. Deprotonation and reprotonation on the carbon of the alpha-hydroxy sulfonium ylide is presumed responsible for production of the trans epoxide.

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