The development of novel radiopharmaceuticals for nuclear medicine based on M(CO)3 (M = Tc, Re) complexes has attracted great attention. The versatility of this core and the easy production of the fac-[M(CO)3(H2O)3](+) precursor could explain this interest. The main characteristics of these tricarbonyl complexes are the high substitution stability of the three CO ligands and the corresponding lability of the coordinated water molecules, yielding, via easy exchange of a variety of bi- and tridentate ligands, complexes xof very high kinetic stability. Here, a computational study of different tricarbonyl complexes of Re(I) and Tc(I) was performed using density functional theory. The solvent effect was simulated using the polarizable continuum model. These structures were used as a starting point to investigate the relative stabilities of tricarbonyl complexes with various tridentate ligands. These complexes included an iminodiacetic acid unit for tridentate coordination to the fac-[M(CO)3](+) moiety (M = Re, Tc), an aromatic ring system bearing a functional group (-NO2, -NH2, and -Cl) as a linking site model, and a tethering moiety (a methylene, ethylene, propylene butylene, or pentylene bridge) between the linking and coordinating sites. The optimized complexes showed geometries comparable to those inferred from X-ray data. In general, the Re complexes were more stable than the corresponding Tc complexes. Furthermore, using NH2 as the functional group, a medium length carbon chain, and ortho substitution increased complex stability. All of the bonds involving the metal center presented a closed shell interaction with dative or covalent character, and the strength of these bonds decreased in the sequence Tc-CO > Tc-O > Tc-N.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00894-016-3043-8 | DOI Listing |
J Inorg Biochem
January 2025
Department of Organic Chemistry, University of Zagreb, Faculty of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Marulićev trg 19, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia. Electronic address:
Novel 6-substituted 2-(trifluoromethyl)quinoline 5a-5e and coumarin 6a-6d ligands with aldoxime ether linked pyridine moiety were synthesized by O-alkylation of quinoline and coumarin with (E)-picolinaldehyde oxime and subsequently with [Re(CO)Cl] gave rhenium(I) tricarbonyl complexes 5a-5e and 6a-6d that were fully characterized by NMR, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, IR and UV-Vis spectroscopy. The results of antiproliferative evaluation of quinoline and coumarin ligands and their rhenium(I) tricarbonyl complexes on various human tumor cell lines, including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (CCRF-CEM), acute monocytic leukemia (THP1), cervical adenocarcinoma (HeLa), colon adenocarcinoma (CaCo-2), T-cell lymphoma (HuT78), and non-tumor human fibroblasts (BJ) showed that the quinoline complexes 5a-5e had higher inhibitory activity than coumarin complexes 6a-6d, particularly against T-cell lymphoma (HuT78) cells. 6-Methoxy-2-(trifluoromethyl)quinoline 5e and 6-methylcoumarin 6d, and their rhenium(I) tricarbonyl complexes 5e and 6d were found to arrest the cell cycle of HuT78 cells by causing a significant accumulation of cells in the G0/G1 phase and a marked decrease in the number of cells in the G2/M phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
December 2024
CICECO - Aveiro Institute of Materials, Department of Chemistry, University of Aveiro, Campus Universitário de Santiago, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal.
Rev Sci Instrum
November 2024
Institute for Inorganic Chemistry, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Max-Eyth-Straße 2, 24118 Kiel, Germany.
Chemistry
November 2024
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, 221005, India.
A novel ferrocene conjugated Mn(I)-tricarbonyl complex viz [Mn(Fc-tpy)(CO)Br] (Mn2) where, Fc-tpy=4'-ferrocenyl-2,2':6',2''-terpyridine was synthesized and fully characterized along with its non-ferrocene analog [Mn(Ph-tpy)(CO)Br] Ph-tpy=4'-phenyl-2,2':6',2''-terpyridine (Mn1) for ultrasound (US) activated anticancer applications. The X-ray structure of Mn2 confirmed its distorted octahedral geometry. Mn1 and Mn2, for the first time, showed US-triggered release of CO and ROS generation (O and OH) in an aqueous solution from any Mn(I)-tricarbonyl complexes, indicating its potential for synergetic CO gas therapy and sonodynamic therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
November 2024
Arbuzov Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry, FRC Kazan Scientific Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, 8 Arbuzov Street, Kazan 420088, Russian Federation.
This study employs an analysis of the per-electron potentials and the superposition of the electrostatic and kinetic force fields, () and (), and the gradients of the potential energy and one-electron densities to investigate the binding mechanism in trimethylenemethane iron tricarbonyl complex (TMM)Fe(CO). Our approach permits the delineation of the "ligand-binding" force field generated by the metal nucleus but partially operating within the ligand atoms. A mechanical rationale for metal-ligand interactions is thus presented: In the corresponding area, the attractive force () provides the backdrop against which the homotropic static force () and the heterotropic kinetic force () exert attractive and repulsive influences, respectively, toward the metal nucleus on a portion of the electrons belonging to the ligand atoms.
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