Manganese(II) complexes of thiophenyl imino-ligand with synergistic behavior in biological systems, ct-DNA interactions, and catalytic oxidative performance of benzyl alcohol
Mohamed Shaker S. Adam , Zakaria S. Bakhuraisa , Mustafa J. Abdelmageed Abualreish , Ahmed Desoky M. Mohamad , Mamdouh A. Mohamed
{"title":"Manganese(II) complexes of thiophenyl imino-ligand with synergistic behavior in biological systems, ct-DNA interactions, and catalytic oxidative performance of benzyl alcohol","authors":"Mohamed Shaker S. Adam , Zakaria S. Bakhuraisa , Mustafa J. Abdelmageed Abualreish , Ahmed Desoky M. Mohamad , Mamdouh A. Mohamed","doi":"10.1016/j.poly.2025.117441","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Considering a facile synthesis and high coordination ability of substituted imines, a condensation reaction between 2-aminobenzenethiol and thiophene-2-carbaldehyde produced an interesting derivative of the thiophenyl imine ligand (HLSNS). The coordination feature of HLSNS with Mn(II) ions was studied in 1 and 2: 1 M ratios, leading to the formation of two different structural complexes, MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)<sub>2</sub>, respectively. Their chemical structures were validated by several suitable techniques, covering also the micro-elemental analyses, thermogravimetric evaluation, magnetic properties, and conductivity behaviors. Biologically, the inhibitory action of HLSNS (the free ligand) and its Mn(II)-chelating reagents on the growth power of three common bacterial and fungal strains, beside three established human cancer cell lines, were evaluated in relation to the presented Mn(II) ion and the structural influences of MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)<sub>2</sub> compared to their free ligand (HLSNS). The antimicrobial and anticancer behavior was estimated based on the measured inhibitory zone (mm) and the half-effective inhibitory concentrations (<em>IC</em><sub>50</sub>, mM). Discovering the pivotal influence of Mn(II) ions and their ratios in the two chelates on the binding strength to the calf thymus DNA (ct-DNA), which reported by the alterations in viscosity and spectrophotometric properties of DNA. The ct-DNA interaction strength was built on the values of binding constants, Gibb’s free energy, and chromism modes, confirming also the interaction modes. For the catalytic potential testing, both MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)<sub>2</sub> were employed for the oxidative progressing of benzyl alcohol using hydrogen peroxide in a homogenous phase at 80 °C. Both catalysts exhibited superior catalytic oxidative activity. The yield percentage of selective benzaldehyde using MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)<sub>2</sub> was 90 % after 4 h, and 84 % after 5 h, respectively. The discrepancy in the optimum activity for both catalysts pertained to the differences in their molecular structures, which helped to assume a convenient mechanism.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":20278,"journal":{"name":"Polyhedron","volume":"270 ","pages":"Article 117441"},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Polyhedron","FirstCategoryId":"92","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277538725000555","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"化学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, INORGANIC & NUCLEAR","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Considering a facile synthesis and high coordination ability of substituted imines, a condensation reaction between 2-aminobenzenethiol and thiophene-2-carbaldehyde produced an interesting derivative of the thiophenyl imine ligand (HLSNS). The coordination feature of HLSNS with Mn(II) ions was studied in 1 and 2: 1 M ratios, leading to the formation of two different structural complexes, MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)2, respectively. Their chemical structures were validated by several suitable techniques, covering also the micro-elemental analyses, thermogravimetric evaluation, magnetic properties, and conductivity behaviors. Biologically, the inhibitory action of HLSNS (the free ligand) and its Mn(II)-chelating reagents on the growth power of three common bacterial and fungal strains, beside three established human cancer cell lines, were evaluated in relation to the presented Mn(II) ion and the structural influences of MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)2 compared to their free ligand (HLSNS). The antimicrobial and anticancer behavior was estimated based on the measured inhibitory zone (mm) and the half-effective inhibitory concentrations (IC50, mM). Discovering the pivotal influence of Mn(II) ions and their ratios in the two chelates on the binding strength to the calf thymus DNA (ct-DNA), which reported by the alterations in viscosity and spectrophotometric properties of DNA. The ct-DNA interaction strength was built on the values of binding constants, Gibb’s free energy, and chromism modes, confirming also the interaction modes. For the catalytic potential testing, both MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)2 were employed for the oxidative progressing of benzyl alcohol using hydrogen peroxide in a homogenous phase at 80 °C. Both catalysts exhibited superior catalytic oxidative activity. The yield percentage of selective benzaldehyde using MnLSNSCl and Mn(LSNS)2 was 90 % after 4 h, and 84 % after 5 h, respectively. The discrepancy in the optimum activity for both catalysts pertained to the differences in their molecular structures, which helped to assume a convenient mechanism.
期刊介绍:
Polyhedron publishes original, fundamental, experimental and theoretical work of the highest quality in all the major areas of inorganic chemistry. This includes synthetic chemistry, coordination chemistry, organometallic chemistry, bioinorganic chemistry, and solid-state and materials chemistry.
Papers should be significant pieces of work, and all new compounds must be appropriately characterized. The inclusion of single-crystal X-ray structural data is strongly encouraged, but papers reporting only the X-ray structure determination of a single compound will usually not be considered. Papers on solid-state or materials chemistry will be expected to have a significant molecular chemistry component (such as the synthesis and characterization of the molecular precursors and/or a systematic study of the use of different precursors or reaction conditions) or demonstrate a cutting-edge application (for example inorganic materials for energy applications). Papers dealing only with stability constants are not considered.