Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1339004 | Polyhedron | 2006 | 10 Pages |
The use of classical Werner-type cis-[Co(Cl)2(tetraamine)]+ (tetraamine = cyclen or tren) complexes for their complexation study of biologically relevant ligands has been pursued. These chlorocomplexes are found to be in the chloroaqua/chlorohydroxo forms under the physiological conditions used, their chloride substitution reactivity being dominated by conjugate base pathways, specially when tetraamine = cyclen. Further studies with nucleotides indicate that the substitution processes on cis-[Co(H2O)2(tetraamine)]3+, up to neutral pH, correspond to a simple reaction producing final stable phosphato bound mononucleotide complexes. These complexes are found to be an equilibrium mixture between monodentate O-phosphato and chelate O-phosphato-N-nucleotide forms. No evidence has been found for hydrolytic cleavage of the phosphato-nucleoside bond, as found in other systems with activated phosphates or higher pH values. A full kinetic profile of the process is proposed for the systems in the 2–7 pH range which is the same for chloride, nucleoside and nucleotide substitutions. The results are indicative of an important degree of outer-sphere hydrogen bonding between the cobaltocomplex and the entering biologically relevant ligands, as expected for these processes.
Graphical abstractcis-[Co(Cl)2(tetraamine)]+ complexes are in the chloroaqua/chlorohydroxo forms under physiological conditions. Substitution studies with nucleotides indicate that the processes correspond to a simple reaction, producing final stable mixtures of monodentate O-phosphato and chelate O-phosphato-N-nucleotide forms. No hydrolytic cleavage of the phosphato-nucleoside bond has been observed.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slide