J. Pessoa, I. Correia, T. Kiss, T. Jakusch, M. Castro, C. Geraldes
{"title":"Oxovanadium(IV and V) and copper(II) complexes of N-salicyl-glycylglycine and N-salicyl-glycylglycylglycine","authors":"J. Pessoa, I. Correia, T. Kiss, T. Jakusch, M. Castro, C. Geraldes","doi":"10.1039/B206835B","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"By reaction of salicylaldehyde and GlyGly or GlyGlyGly, followed by reduction with NaBH4, N-salicyl-glycylglycine 1 and N-salicyl-glycylglycylglycine 2, the reduced Schiff bases H2sal-RGG and H2sal-RGGG, containing the GlyGly or GlyGlyGly moities, are prepared and characterised. Their acid–base properties and complexation with VIVO2+ and CuII are studied by pH-potentiometry, visible absorption and EPR spectrometries, and the protonation and complex formation constants are determined. Vanadium and copper complexes are also prepared and characterised. Differences in the metal binding abilities of 1 and 2 are found. Amide deprotonation is proved but its extent depends on the system, being particularly important in the M–H2sal-RGG systems with the formation of the (O-phenolate, N-amine, N-amide, COO−) (6+5+5)-membered joined chelate system. Depending on the system, at physiological pH this binding mode and/or 2 × (O-phenolate, N-amine) are dominant. The aminophenolate chelates formed with sal-RGG and sal-RGGG behave as anchoring donor sites and the ML and ML2 complexes, involving O-phenolate, N-amine chelation, form in higher relative concentration than in the corresponding M–GlyGly or M–GlyGlyGly systems. Moreover, while for the VIVO–H2sal-RGG system the N-amide deprotonation/co-ordination is strongly promoted, it is not so favoured in the CuII–H2sal-RGG and CuII–H2sal-RGGG systems. The increased stability induced by the additional O-phenolate donor is particularly relevant for sal-RGG and hydrolysis of the MLH−1 complexes starts several pH units higher than in the GlyGly systems. In contrast to VIV, the VV complexes formed with sal-RGGG were found to be more stable than those of sal-RGG.","PeriodicalId":17317,"journal":{"name":"Journal of The Chemical Society-dalton Transactions","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2002-11-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"16","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of The Chemical Society-dalton Transactions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1039/B206835B","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 16
Abstract
By reaction of salicylaldehyde and GlyGly or GlyGlyGly, followed by reduction with NaBH4, N-salicyl-glycylglycine 1 and N-salicyl-glycylglycylglycine 2, the reduced Schiff bases H2sal-RGG and H2sal-RGGG, containing the GlyGly or GlyGlyGly moities, are prepared and characterised. Their acid–base properties and complexation with VIVO2+ and CuII are studied by pH-potentiometry, visible absorption and EPR spectrometries, and the protonation and complex formation constants are determined. Vanadium and copper complexes are also prepared and characterised. Differences in the metal binding abilities of 1 and 2 are found. Amide deprotonation is proved but its extent depends on the system, being particularly important in the M–H2sal-RGG systems with the formation of the (O-phenolate, N-amine, N-amide, COO−) (6+5+5)-membered joined chelate system. Depending on the system, at physiological pH this binding mode and/or 2 × (O-phenolate, N-amine) are dominant. The aminophenolate chelates formed with sal-RGG and sal-RGGG behave as anchoring donor sites and the ML and ML2 complexes, involving O-phenolate, N-amine chelation, form in higher relative concentration than in the corresponding M–GlyGly or M–GlyGlyGly systems. Moreover, while for the VIVO–H2sal-RGG system the N-amide deprotonation/co-ordination is strongly promoted, it is not so favoured in the CuII–H2sal-RGG and CuII–H2sal-RGGG systems. The increased stability induced by the additional O-phenolate donor is particularly relevant for sal-RGG and hydrolysis of the MLH−1 complexes starts several pH units higher than in the GlyGly systems. In contrast to VIV, the VV complexes formed with sal-RGGG were found to be more stable than those of sal-RGG.