Insights into Second-Sphere Effects on Redox Potentials, Spectroscopic Properties, and Superoxide Dismutase Activity of Manganese Complexes with Schiff-Base Ligands.

ACS Omega

IQUIR (Instituto de Química Rosario), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Suipacha 531, S2002LRK Rosario, Argentina.

Published: January 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Six Mn-Schiff base complexes were synthesized and characterized for their ability to catalyze the dismutation of superoxide, demonstrating catalytic rates between 0.65 to 1.54 × 10 M s in neutral pH solutions.
  • The complexes contain two labile solvent molecules that facilitate reactivity with superoxide, although at high concentrations, they can undergo self-inhibition leading to inactive dimers.
  • Analysis of spectroscopic and electrochemical data indicates that second-sphere interactions significantly influence the catalytic efficiency and redox behavior of the Mn centers during the dismutation process.

Article Abstract

Six Mn-Schiff base complexes, [Mn(X-salpn)] (salpn = 1,3-bis(sal-ic-ylidenamino)propane, X = H [], 5-Cl [], 2,5-F [], 3,5-Cl [], 5-NO [], 3,5-(NO) []), were synthesized and characterized in solution, and second-sphere effects on their electrochemical and spectroscopic properties were analyzed. The six complexes catalyze the dismutation of superoxide with catalytic rate constants in the range 0.65 to 1.54 × 10 M s obtained through the nitro blue tetrazolium photoreduction inhibition superoxide dismutases assay, in aqueous medium of pH 7.8. In solution, these compounds possess two labile solvent molecules in the axial positions favoring coordination of the highly nucleophilic O to the metal center. Even complex , [Mn(5-(NO)salpn) (OAc) (HO)], with an axial acetate in the solid state, behaves as a 1:1 electrolyte in methanolic solution. Electron paramagnetic resonance and UV-vis monitoring of the reaction of [Mn(X-salpn)] with KO demonstrates that in diluted solutions these complexes behave as catalysts supporting several additions of excess O , but at high complex concentrations (≥0.75 mM) catalyst self-inhibition occurs by the formation of a catalytically inactive dimer. The correlation of spectroscopic, electrochemical, and kinetics data suggest that second-sphere effects control the oxidation states of Mn involved in the O dismutation cycle catalyzed by complexes and modulate the strength of the Mn-substrate adduct for electron-transfer through an inner-sphere mechanism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6649300PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.8b03018DOI Listing

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