We investigated the effects of antitumor-active tetrazolato-bridged dinuclear platinum(II) complexes [{cis-Pt(NH(3))(2)}(2)(μ-OH)(μ-tetrazolato-N(1),N(2))](2+) (1) and [{cis-Pt(NH(3))(2)}(2)(μ-OH)(μ-tetrazolato-N(2),N(3))](2+) (2) on the higher-order structure of a large DNA molecule (T4 phage DNA, 166 kbp) in aqueous solution through single-molecule observation by fluorescence microscopy. Complexes 1 and 2 cause irreversible compaction of DNA through an intermediate state in which coil and compact parts coexist in a single DNA molecule. The potency of compaction is in the order 2 > 1 ≫ cisplatin. Transmission electron microscopic observation showed that both complexes collapsed DNA into an irregularly packed structure. Circular dichroism measurements revealed that the dinuclear platinum(II) complexes change the secondary structure of DNA from the B to C form. These characteristics of platinum(II) complexes are markedly different from those of the usual condensing agents such as spermidine(3+) and [Co(III)(NH(3))(6)](3+). The ability to cause DNA compaction by the platinum(II) complexes is discussed in relation to their potent antitumor activity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ic2017165 | DOI Listing |
Chemistry
January 2025
The University of British Columbia, Department of Chemistry, 2036 Main Mall, V6T 1Z1, Vancouver, CANADA.
The field of platinum chemistry is ubiquitous in the research of anticancer drugs and new OLED materials. Within the vast library of existing compounds, the majority of work focuses on complexes in the +2 and +4 oxidation states, with comparatively few examples of PtIII complexes reported without bridging ligands. PtIII complexes with metal-metal bonding can be made by mild oxidation of PtII complexes having bis(phenylpyridine) ligands.
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January 2025
Department of Chemistry, Babeş-Bolyai University, Str. Arany Janos Nr. 11, RO-400028 Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
The synthesis and characterization of novel platinum(II) and platinum(IV) complexes derived from unsymmetrical ethylene or propylenediamine derivatives are presented. IR spectroscopy and ESI mass spectrometry techniques were employed to characterize the complexes, revealing distinctive absorption bands and isotope patterns. Furthermore, the complexes were characterized by H and C NMR spectroscopy.
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January 2025
Institut de Chimie Moléculaire de l'Université de Bourgogne (ICMUB), UMR 6302 CNRS, Université de Bourgogne, 9 Avenue Alain Savary, BP 47870, 21078 Dijon Cedex, France.
Water-soluble porphyrins have garnered significant attention due to their broad range of applications in biomedicine, catalysis, and material chemistry. In this work, water-soluble platinum(II) and palladium(II) complexes with porphyrins bearing ethyl phosphonate substituents, namely, Pt/Pd 10-(ethoxyhydroxyphosphoryl)-5,15-di(-carboxyphenyl)porphyrins (M3m, M = Pt(II), Pd(II)) and Pt/Pd 5,10-bis(ethoxyhydroxyphosphoryl)-10,20-diarylporphyrins (M1d-M3d; aryl = -tolyl (1), mesityl (2), -carboxyphenyl (3)), were synthesized by alkaline hydrolysis of the corresponding diethyl phosphonates M6m and M4d-M6d. NMR, UV-vis, and fluorescence spectroscopy revealed that the mono-phosphonates M3m tend to form aggregates in aqueous media, while the bis-phosphonates M3d exist predominantly as monomeric species across a wide range of concentrations (10-10 M), ionic strengths (0-0.
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December 2024
Institute of Chemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology, Jan Dlugosz University in Czestochowa, Armii Krajowej 13/15, 42-200 Czestochowa, Poland.
This study investigates the structural, vibrational, and biological properties of novel palladium(II) and platinum(II) complexes with 5-chloro-7-azaindole-3-carbaldehyde (5ClL) and 4-chloro-7-azaindole-3-carbaldehyde (4ClL) ligands. Infrared and Raman spectroscopy, combined with DFT (ωB97X-D) calculations, provided valuable information about metal-ligand interactions, the or conformation of the aldehyde group in the ligands, and the presence of isomers in the metal complexes obtained in the solid state. tests were used to evaluate the antiproliferative activity of the novel complexes against several cancer cell lines, including ovarian cancer (A2780), cisplatin-resistant ovarian cancer (A2780cis), colon cancer (HT-29), and triple-negative breast cancer (MDA-MB-231), as well as normal mouse fibroblasts (BALB/3T3).
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December 2024
School of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Macquarie University, NSW, 2109, Australia.
The development of the trinuclear platinum(II) complex BBR3464 (also known as triplatin) in the late 1990s was meant to be a revolution in the field of platinum chemotherapy. What made it remarkable was that it defied many of the known structure-activity rules for platinums; it is cationic, has a single labile leaving group on each terminal platinum, and it binds DNA in ways different to mononuclear platinum drugs, like cisplatin and oxaliplatin. The flexible, long-range adducts the drug forms with DNA means that it showed activity in cancers not typically sensitive to platinums, and more importantly, BBR3464 demonstrated an ability to overcome acquired resistance to platinum drugs.
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