59 research outputs found
Metallacrowns of Ni(II) with alpha-aminohydroxamic acids in aqueous solution: beyond a 12-MC-4, an unexpected (vacant?) 15-MC-5
Growing attention has been devoted in the recent years to a class of metallamacrocycles known as metallacrowns (MCs). They are structural analogues of crown ethers where the methylene bridges have been substituted by coordinative bonds formed by a transition metal ion ("ring" metal) and a nitrogen atom. The cavity of the metallacrown can accommodate an additional metal ion ("core" metal) either identical or different from the ring metal, thus forming a homo- or hetero-metallic MC. The most studied ring metal ion is certainly Cu(2+) and the aminohydroxamic acids have proved to be very suitable ligands to form MCs. The behavioural analogies between Cu(2+) and Ni(2+) in forming complexes, along with recent literature data in the solid state, prompted us to investigate the possible MC formation between Ni(2+) and both (S)-α-alaninehydroxamic acid and (S)-valinehydroxamic acid, in aqueous solution. Two metallacrowns, a 12-MC-4 and an unexpected 15-MC-5 have been detected by potentiometry and confirmed by ESI-MS results. Their structures are discussed on the basis of potentiometric, calorimetric, spectroscopic data and DFT calculations. The existence of a vacant 15-MC-5 species in solution can be put forward for the first time, making the present metal/ligand systems very interesting for their potential applications in cation recognition and separation. Finally, the crystal structure of the binary complex K[NiL(2)H(-1)]·5/3 H(2)O of (S)-α-alaninehydroxamic acid (LH) is also reported
Semirigid Ligands Enhance Different Coordination Behavior of Nd and Dy Relevant to Their Separation and Recovery in a Non-aqueous Environment
Rare-earth elements are widely used in high-end technologies, the production of permanent magnets (PMs) being one of the sectors with the greatest current demand and likely greater future demand. The combination of Nd and Dy in NdFeB PMs enhances their magnetic properties but makes their recycling more challenging. Due to the similar chemical properties of Nd and Dy, their separation is expensive and currently limited to the small scale. It is therefore crucially important to devise efficient and selective methods that can recover and then reuse those critical metals. To address these issues, a series of heptadentate Trensal-based ligands were used for the complexation of Dy3+ and Nd3+ ions, with the goal of indicating the role of coordination and solubility equilibria in the selective precipitation of Ln3+-metal complexes from multimetal non-water solutions. Specifically, for a 1:1 Nd/Dy mixture, a selective and fast precipitation of the Dy complex occurred in acetone with the Trensalp-OMe ligand at room temperature, with a concomitant enrichment of Nd in the solution phase. In acetone, complexes of Nd and Dy with Trensalp-OMe were characterized by very similar formation constants of 7.0(2) and 7.3(2), respectively. From the structural analysis of an array of Dy and Nd complexes with TrensalR ligands, we showed that Dy invariably provided complexes with coordination number (cn) of 7, whereas the larger Nd experienced an expansion of the coordination sphere by recruiting additional solvent molecules and giving a cn of >7. The significant structural differences have been identified as the main premises upon which a suitable separation strategy can be devised with these kind of ligands, as well as other preorganized polydentate ligands that can exploit the small differences in Ln3+ coordination requirements
Cu-complexes with scorpionate ligands as models for the binding sites of copper proteins
The bioinorganic relevance of copper is made evident by its involvement in many crucial biological functions, which include: (1) dioxygen activation (copper oxidases and oxygenases) and transport (hemocyanin), (2) electron transfer (cupredoxins), and (3) nitrite reduction to nitric oxide (copper nitrite reductases). As metalloprotein chemistry is governed by the environment close to the metal center(s), a fertile field of investigation is concerned with the preparation of low molecular weight complexes that mimic the structural or functional features of protein active sites. Trofimenko's scorpionate ligands have been extensively used in biomimetic chemistry as "spectator ligands", which modulate the electronic and steric properties of the metal ion and of the co-ligands ("actor ligands"), but are not directly involved in the metal-based reactivity. The structural and functional properties of copper complexes with scorpionate ligands used as synthetic analogs for the binding sites of copper proteins are the subject of the present review. The specific Cu-binding sites examined are: the T3 binuclear and the T2 mononuclear sites of dioxygen-binding proteins, the T1 sites of electrontransfer in blue copper proteins, and the T2 site of nitrite reductase. © 2009 Bentham Science Publishers Ltd
Copper compounds in anticancer strategies
The chemical properties of copper allow it to take part in many biological functions such as electron transfer, catalysis, and structural shaping. The ability to cycle between +1 and +2 oxidation state is one of the features that has been exploited by organisms throughout the evolutionary process. Since copper is potentially toxic to cells also a finely controlled mechanism for copper handling has evolved. On the other side, many copper complexes were synthesized and tested for their anticancer activity in vitro and in vivo. Their ability to kill cancer cells is mainly related to the induction of an oxidative stress, but recently it emerged their ability to inhibit the proteasome, a protein complex whose proteolitic activity is needed by several cellular process. It has generally been described that the toxic effects of copper complexes leads to cell death either by necrosis or through the activation of the apoptotic process. Evidences are rising about the ability of some copper compounds to induce alternative non-apoptotic form of programmed cell death. Since copper is indispensable for the formation of new blood vessels, angiogenesis, a different antitumor approach based on the administration of copper sequestering agents has been attempted and its effectiveness is currently under evaluation by clinical trials. The proven essentiality of copper for angiogenesis, together with the marked sensitivity shown by several cancer cell lines to the copper toxicity, open a new perspective in the anticancer strategy: exploiting the tumor need of copper to accumulate toxic amount of the metal inside its cells
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