Gátszegi, Gerda T. and Petrasheuskaya, Tatsiana and May, Nóra Veronika and Hajdu, Bálint and Spengler, Gabriella and Bacher, Felix and Shova, Sergiu and Arion, Vladimir B. and Enyedy, Éva Anna (2025) Solution equilibrium and redox properties of metal complexes with 2-formylpyridine guanylhydrazone derivatives: Effect of morpholine and piperazine substitutions. JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY, 264. No. 112812. ISSN 0162-0134
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Abstract
Schiff bases derived from aminoguanidine are extensively investigated for their structural versatility. The tridentate 2-formylpyridine guanylhydrazones act as analogues of 2-formyl or 2-acetylpyridine thiosemicarbazones, where the thioamide unit is replaced by the guanidyl group. Six derivatives of 2-formylpyridine guanylhydrazone were synthesized and their proton dissociation and complex formation processes with Cu(II), Fe(II) and Fe(III) ions were studied using pH-potentiometry, UV–visible, NMR and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic methods. The ligands have substituents such as amine, morpholine, N-methyl-piperazine at different positions of the pyridine ring. The influence of the different structural elements on the solution chemical properties and cytotoxicity has been disclosed. The solid state structure of four ligands was determined by X-ray crystallography. The ligands bind to Cu(II) in a tridentate fashion via an (N,N,N) donor set, forming mono-ligand complexes. However, for ligands with heterocyclic morpholine and piperazine nitrogen atoms in coordination position a tetradentate binding was observed. Despite the additional coordinating donor atom, the stability of these Cu(II) complexes showed little or no increase. The Cu(II), Fe(II) and Fe(III) complexes of the studied 2-formylpyridine guanylhydrazones exhibited significantly lower stability compared to their corresponding 2-formyl or 2-acetylpyridine thiosemicarbazone analogues. The ligands underwent slow partial hydrolysis (and oxidation) in the presence of Cu(II) ions, leading to the formation of new ligands through the reorganization of structural components around the metal ion. Additionally, the studied Cu(II) complexes demonstrated a great propensity for reduction by glutathione. All these features contributed to the finding that these 2-formylpyridine guanylhydrazones and their Cu(II) complexes did not display measurable cytotoxic activity.
Item Type: | Article |
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Additional Information: | Funding Agency and Grant Number: Distinguished Guest Scientist Fellowship Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences; University Research Fellowship Programme of the Ministry of Culture and Innovation [EKOP-24-2-EKOP-444]; OeAD Ernst Mach grant; Ministry of Culture and Innovation of Hungary from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [TKP2021-EGA-32, TKP2021-EGA]; [MPC-2021-00073] Funding text: V.B.A. was supported by the Distinguished Guest Scientist Fellowship Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and EKOP-24-2-EKOP-444 University Research Fellowship Programme of the Ministry of Culture and Innovation (G.T.G.) and OeAD Ernst Mach grant MPC-2021-00073 are also acknowledged (T.V.P.) . Project no TKP2021-EGA-32 has been implemented with the support provided by the Ministry of Culture and Innovation of Hungary from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund, financed under the TKP2021-EGA funding scheme. We thank Dr. Tim Gruene and the team of the Centre for X-ray Structural Analysis (Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna) for X-ray diffraction measurements. |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Solution stability, Aminoguanidine, EPR spectroscopy, Cyclic voltammetry, Copper complexes, X-ray crystallography |
Subjects: | Q Science / természettudomány > QD Chemistry / kémia |
SWORD Depositor: | MTMT SWORD |
Depositing User: | MTMT SWORD |
Date Deposited: | 25 Feb 2025 10:05 |
Last Modified: | 25 Feb 2025 10:05 |
URI: | https://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/216018 |
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