Current directions in radiochemistry and nuclear medicine highlight the importance of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging. PET is one of the molecular imaging modalities that probes physiological changes noninvasively. A fundamental critical component of PET radiometal-based radiopharmaceutical is a chelator - the ligand system that binds the radiometal ion in a tight, stable,
kinetically inert coordination complex so that it can be properly directed to a desirable molecular target
in vivo. Currently, the most successfully used 89Zr(IV) chelator is desferrioxamine B (DFOB) but some
decomposition can be observed over time in vivo, as 89Zr slowly accumulates in bones. Nevertheless,
the thermodynamic studies for Zr(IV) - DFOB system have not been performed till this work. Therefore,
the solution chemistry of Zr(IV) - DFOB (here (Zr(IV) - H4L1+ ) has been investigated as the first step
of the thesis. The obtained data are in line with the problems with the full effectiveness of DFOB as a
zirconium chelator. Even if there are many other highly competent zirconium chelators described in the
literature up to now, DFOB still remains the best choice for 89Zr. This allows recognizing the challenges
to be addressed by inorganic chemistry directing to the development of new scaffolds. In order to develop novel chelators for non-invasive in vivo imaging agents and understand the
influence of ligands’ structure, size or flexibility on the stability of Zr(IV) complexes, a series of tri- and
tetra-hydroxamic (or mixed donor) ligands with linear, cyclic and pendant arrangements have been
designed, synthesized and fully characterized. To get a deep insight into the thermodynamic stability and binding aspects of Zr(IV) complexes, several techniques including electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, potentiometry, UV–Vis spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry were used to determine the stoichiometry and thermodynamic stability of complexes formed in solution over pH range 1 - 11, overcoming all the difficulties with the characterisation of the aqueous solution chemistry of Zr(IV) complexes, like strong
hydrolysis and lack of spectral information. Overall, the results obtained for the whole series of compounds bring very important information
on parameters that can influence the thermodynamic stability of the complexes formed in solution. The
comparison of cyclic versus linear/tripodal trihydroxamate chelators did not show any significant
differences, with all of them being in the range of good Zr(IV) chelators, close to the affinity of DFOB.
The pM for cyclic tetrahydroxamate chelator H4L3 (pM = 37.0) is in the same range as the most stable
tetrapodal compound of this work, H4L6 (pM = 37.5). The comparison of the results obtained for
tetrapodal chelators (H4L6, H4L7 and H4L8) clearly shows the importance of the ligand flexibility
as well as its high symmetry in order to improve the complex stability. Among investigated ligands, the
highest stability was observed for Zr(IV) complexes of mixed donors, trihydroxamate-catecholate H6L9
ligand. Importantly, participation in the International Joint Doctoral Study Programme in Chemistry
between University of Wroclaw and Ferrara University, and Short Term Scientific Missions to Ferrara
University funded by Erasmus+ and COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology), Action
CA18202, NECTAR – Network for Equilibria and Chemical Thermodynamics Advanced Research,
allowed me to profit from the expertise and knowledge of prof. Remo Guerrini’s research group to
design and perform the synthesis of very efficient, tetrapodal hydroxamate Zr(IV) chelator - H4L3.
Understanding the thermodynamic stability and structural properties of the Zr(IV) complexes formed by the studied ligands opens the possibility of further design of ligands with improved properties and the potential to be used in the field of 89Zr - PET