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⚗ Metals 2487 ▶
▾ Metals — Platinum (109)
apoptosis (297)Pt (214)pt (24)ferroptosis (22)oxaliplatin (21)cisplatin (21)pyroptosis (7)necroptosis (6)transcription (6)carboplatin (5)transcription factors (5)transcriptional regulation (5)platinum (4)lead optimization (3)transcription regulation (3)metabolic adaptation (3)pt(ii) complexes (2)transcriptional regulatory interactions (2)ferroptosis induction (2)transcription initiation (2)transcription-coupled repair (2)adaptive binding (2)cellular adaptation (2)post-transcriptional regulation (2)pt(dach)methionine (1)transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (tc-ner) (1)triptolide (1)molecular optimization (1)pt(dach)cl4 (1)innate apoptotic immunity (1)pta (1)oligopeptides (1)transcription-coupled ner (1)ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (fsp1) (1)apoptotic cells (1)platinumbased (1)hptab (1)signaling-transcriptional mechanisms (1)oncogene transcription inhibition (1)pt2 (1)admet optimization (1)receptor (1)pten (1)platinum(ii) (1)chain-of-thought prompt engineering (1)tetrapeptides (1)apoptotic function (1)adaptive immune response (1)gpt-2 (1)platinum drugs (1)ptii complex (1)platinum complexes (1)transcriptomics (1)cell metabolism disruption (1)peptide (1)pt(s,s-dab) (1)pt(r,r-dab) (1)pt3(hptab) (1)estrogen receptor (1)transcriptional addiction (1)transcription stress (1)septicemia (1)optical spectroscopies (1)receptors (1)selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (ssri) (1)transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (1)pt(r,r-dach) (1)chiroptical response (1)diplatinum helicate (1)cyclometalated 1,3-bis(8-quinolyl) phenyl chloroplatinum(ii) (1)transcriptional activity (1)pt1 (1)disrupting a base pair (1)platinum-containing drugs (1)gpt-4 (1)transcriptional stalling (1)transcription inhibition (1)apoptotic (1)eukaryotic transcription (1)base pairing disruption (1)apoptosis-related disorders (1)coordination chemistry is not relevant, but bioinorganic and medicinal chemistry are related concepts (1)chatgpt (1)apoptosis induction (1)platinum(ii)-based (1)transcriptional activation (1)platinum-based compounds (1)inhibition of transcription factors (1)molecular descriptors (1)pt(dach)oxalato (1)polypeptide chains (1)pt(dach)cl2 (1)glp-1 receptor agonists (1)chiroptical applications (1)pt(s,s-dach) (1)cell-penetrating peptides (1)cysteine uptake (1)therapeutic optimization (1)shape description methods (1)transcription blockage (1)antiferroptotic (1)rna transcription (1)electronic absorption (1)cellular adaptation to hypoxia (1)ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (1)apoptosis evasion (1)phosphopeptide-based kinome analysis (1)anti-apoptotic (1)gpt (1)
▾ Metals — Cobalt (185)
coordination-chemistry (102)Co (64)coordination chemistry (55)colorectal cancer (19)computational biology (7)spectroscopy (7)computational chemistry (6)computational modeling (6)pharmacology (6)co (5)pharmacovigilance (5)cryo-electron microscopy (4)glucose (4)colon cancer (4)metal complexes (4)glycolysis (4)oncology (4)pharmacokinetics (4)conformational change (3)glycocalyx (3)oncometabolite (3)complex i (3)oncosis (3)oncogenesis (2)polypharmacology (2)in-silico (2)plant secondary metabolites (2)computational approaches (2)in silico (2)convolutional neural networks (2)complex iii (2)natural compounds (2)pharmacodynamics (2)mitochondrial complex i (2)aerobic glycolysis (2)oncogene (2)covid-19 (2)microviscosity (1)pharmacometabolomics (1)complex formation (1)redox control (1)fatty alcohols (1)influence on physicochemical properties (1)fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (1)convolutional neural network (1)conditional lethality (1)picolinic acid (1)sars-cov-1 (1)metabolic control (1)pharmacological inhibition (1)pharmacokinetic (1)therapeutic controversy (1)multicolor emission (1)co2 fixation (1)protein complex (1)oncogenes (1)recombination (1)confocal microscopy (1)metal-ligand cooperation (1)cell surface recognition (1)sarcoma (1)network pharmacology (1)covalent interaction (1)escherichia coli (1)cobalamin (1)reversible compartmentalization (1)oncogene promoter regions (1)cellular compartments (1)coulometric karl fischer apparatus (1)combinatorial treatment (1)heme-containing enzymes (1)coimmunoprecipitation assay (1)glycosphingolipids (1)comorbidities (1)glycolytic activity (1)computational metabolomics (1)conformational isomerization (1)constitutive induction (1)confocal imaging (1)alcoholic hepatitis (1)knowledge discovery (1)oncogenic mutation (1)cobaltocene (1)coordination (1)computational approach (1)inorganic compounds (1)toxicology (1)conformational stability (1)connectivity mapping (1)mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2 (1)pharmacokinetic analyses (1)membrane permeability comparison (1)computer models (1)pathological conditions (1)dna condensation (1)4-octyl-itaconate (4-oi) (1)glucose dependence (1)cockayne's syndrome (1)atomic force microscope (1)complex diseases (1)dna conformational distortion (1)computational prediction (1)health economics (1)viscometry (1)conformational transitions (1)anticoagulant (1)glycome (1)oncogenic pathways (1)mitochondrial quality control (1)spin-orbit coupling (1)cytosolic ca21 concentration (1)cobamide (1)glycobiology (1)coimmunoprecipitation (1)dual protein expansion microscopy (1)brightfield microscopy (1)complexes (1)fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (frap) (1)glucose deprivation resistance (1)physicochemical properties (1)cell-like compartments (1)expansion microscopy (1)anticoagulants (1)ascorbic acid (1)oncogenic signaling (1)collective intelligence (1)cordycepin (1)genetic encoding (1)co2 (1)coupled-cluster computations (1)atp-competitive inhibitors (1)non-covalent interaction (1)computational methods (1)conformational states (1)conformational transition (1)electronic health records (1)sars-cov-2 (1)computational models (1)pharmacodynamic (1)text encoder (1)social cognition (1)sensory nerve conduction velocity (1)covalent binding (1)oncogene-mediated cellular transformation (1)fluorescence microscopy (1)glycolysis pathway (1)electronic conductometry (1)conformational landscapes (1)inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (1)itaconate (1)co(terpy)2+ (1)nmr spectroscopy (1)computational analysis (1)inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (1)coenzyme q10 (1)cell communication (1)colony formation assay (1)physico-chemical mechanisms (1)recognition (1)glycolytic enzymes (1)systems pharmacology (1)atomic force microscopy (1)computational methodologies (1)oncogenic (1)click expansion microscopy (1)glycosylation (1)n-(2-picolyl)salicylimine (1)ewing sarcoma (1)computational study (1)anticoagulation (1)confocal laser scanning microscopy (1)immuno-oncology (1)genome conformation profiling (1)somatic comorbidities (1)uv-vis spectroscopy (1)in silico analysis (1)co-immunoprecipitation (1)caco-2 cell monolayers (1)scoping review (1)conformational switch (1)damage recognition (1)entity recognition (1)energy conversion (1)noncovalent interactions (1)computer analysis (1)
▾ Metals — Iron (60)
▾ Metals — Ruthenium (86)
Ru (41)drug discovery (27)drug-delivery (23)drug resistance (11)prodrug (9)drug-drug interactions (9)drugs (7)adverse drug reactions (7)structural biology (7)drug repurposing (6)drug delivery (5)drug (5)drug development (5)g-quadruplex dna (4)ru (4)protein structure (3)drug interactions (3)structural analysis (3)drug screening (3)drug-target interaction prediction (3)g-quadruplex (3)drug design (3)drug repositioning (2)metallodrugs (2)structural data (2)drug-target interaction (2)serum (1)structure-based virtual screening (1)recruitment (1)hexammineruthenium(iii) (1)drug testing (1)spectrum diagrams (1)drug therapy (1)drug safety monitoring (1)drug sensitivity and resistance testing (1)drug safety assessment (1)structure (1)structural insights (1)adverse drug reaction detection (1)drug sensitization (1)drug target (1)truncations (1)drug-drug interaction prediction (1)protein structure-function relationship (1)pyruvate (1)drug-drug interaction identification (1)phenotypic drug screening (1)spontaneous adverse drug reaction reports (1)structural basis (1)antiviral drug discovery (1)drug tolerance (1)green rust (1)structural modeling (1)small-molecule drugs (1)structural methods (1)drug-nutrient interactions (1)adverse drug events (1)computational drug discovery (1)metal-based drugs (1)structural rearrangement (1)protein structure analysis (1)virus (1)small-molecule oral drugs (1)targeted drug delivery (1)adverse drug reaction (1)chemical drugs (1)doxorubicin (1)drug resistance reduction (1)drug-likeness (1)drug interaction prediction (1)drug target identification (1)macromolecular structure determination (1)resorufin (1)drug interaction analysis (1)drug combinations (1)non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (nsaids) (1)structural bioinformatics (1)structure prediction (1)drug response (1)drug interaction screening (1)ruthenium(ii)-based (1)drug detection (1)structure-function analysis (1)metal-based drug (1)protocellular structures (1)drug interaction identification (1)
▾ Metals — Copper (63)
▾ Metals — Gold (19)
▾ Metals — Iridium (29)
▾ Metals — Others (17)
▾ Metals — Palladium (13)
▾ Metals — Zinc (5)
▾ Metals — Other (17)
🔬 Methods 1116 ▶
▾ Methods — Other experimental (213)
synthesis (244)ML (51)docking (23)natural language processing (12)in vitro (7)in vivo (6)morphological profiling (4)literature search (4)benchmarking (4)network analysis (4)image-based profiling (3)biochemical analysis (3)text analysis (3)bibliometric analysis (3)api (2)incites (2)vosviewer (2)experimental (2)theoretical studies (2)high-throughput screening (2)sequence analysis (2)information extraction (2)pubmed (2)cck-8 assay (2)statistics (2)lectin array (2)statistical approach (2)literature review (2)genetic (2)icite (2)lectin microarray (2)semantic search (2)data visualization (1)in vivo studies (1)target-based approaches (1)permeability measurement (1)gene expression profile (1)patch clamp (1)cnns (1)knockout mouse studies (1)cpg island methylator phenotype (1)in vitro models (1)immunoblot (1)bret2 (1)preclinical models (1)graph theory (1)gnns (1)passive rheology (1)nonequilibrium sensitivity analysis (1)ex vivo (1)multilayer network integration (1)inhibition assay (1)go analysis (1)experimental data analysis (1)caspase activity (1)nct (1)esm (1)web of science (1)gene expression microarray (1)uv light exposure (1)text2sql (1)decision-making (1)short tandem repeat profiling (1)in-vitro (1)analytical determination methods (1)perturbation (1)immunospecific antibodies (1)overexpression (1)mechanistic analysis (1)nuclease digestion (1)enzymatic reaction (1)excision assay (1)nuclear magnetic resonance (not explicitly mentioned but implied through study of variants) (1)pampa assay (1)experimental studies (1)null models (1)binding studies (1)clinical analysis (1)semi-supervised learning (1)efficacy analyses (1)supervised learning (1)electric field application (1)mouse model (1)estimates (1)isothermal calorimetry (1)rational design (1)learning to rank (1)gene expression analysis (1)fluorometry (1)octanol-aqueous shake-flask method (1)polypharmacy regimens (1)predictive models (1)xr-seq (1)graph learning (1)human studies (1)in vivo lung perfusion (1)merip-seq (1)uv-detection (1)atp hydrolysis (1)clinical methods (1)data processing (1)glovebox-bound apparatus (1)hoechst 33,258 staining (1)mutational analyses (1)semantic retrieval (1)solid-phase microextraction (1)immunization (1)pathscan array (1)quantitative phase behavior (1)natural bond orbital (nbo) analysis (1)ai (1)immunological analysis (1)cellular assays (1)synthetic biology tools (1)nanotherapeutic approaches (1)splicing regulation profiling (1)genome-wide screening (1)loss-of-function screens (1)histochemical staining (1)resazurin reduction assay (1)stopped-flow ph jump experiments (1)protein language model (1)experimental validation (1)matrix factorization (1)giao method (1)multi-head attention mechanism (1)rnns (1)phase ii trial (1)calorimetry (1)high throughput screening (1)trp emission (1)self-supervised learning (1)chemocentric approach (1)graph-based learning (1)tcga analysis (1)theoretical framework (1)machine-learning algorithms (1)ablation experiments (1)boolean logic (1)guanidine hydrochloride denaturation (1)ic50 index (1)statistical analysis (1)quantification (1)ensemble learning (1)in vitro study (1)relation search (1)relation extraction (1)image segmentation (1)genetic studies (1)genome-wide analysis (1)knockdown (1)ccsd(t) (1)biochemical characterization (1)performance evaluation (1)nbo 3.1 (1)rocplotter (1)mitoplast preparation (1)cryoem (1)entity annotation (1)modeling (1)systems engineering (1)database analysis (1)radiation exposure (1)prognostic tools (1)mouse models (1)nuclear magnetic resonance (1)proximity ligation assays (1)mp2(fc)/6–311 +  + (2d,2p) (1)personalized treatments (1)ncbi e-utilities (1)gradient boosting machines (1)kegg analysis (1)genetic algorithm (1)algorithms (1)experimental design (1)system-level/network analyses (1)visualized analysis (1)aimall (1)radiotherapy (1)laboratory methods (1)displacement assay (1)electrophoretic retardation measurements (1)seahorse platform (1)normoxia (1)mixture modeling (1)high-throughput (1)experimental methods (1)slot blot (1)magnetic tweezers (1)thermal denaturation (1)global genome ner (1)genetic profiling (1)mutation analysis (1)algorithm development (1)modelling (1)cell migration assay (1)methylome profiling (1)biochemical studies (1)patch clamping (1)umbrella review (1)zotero (1)immunoblotting (1)statistical methods (1)cellular models (1)miclip (1)fluorometric assay (1)enzymatic assays (1)genetic analysis (1)photophysical (1)biomedical information retrieval (1)logistic regression (1)in-vivo (1)mutational status analysis (1)
▾ Methods — Computational (31)
▾ Methods — Crystallography / Structure (4)
▾ Methods — Cell biology (21)
▾ Methods — Spectroscopy (19)
▾ Methods — Genomics / Omics (25)
▾ Methods — Mass spec / Chromatography (6)
▾ Methods — Clinical / Epidemiology (8)
▾ Methods — Electrochemistry (5)
▾ Methods — Other (1)
🎯 Targets 980 ▶
▾ Targets — Mitochondria (15)
▾ Targets — Other (157)
protein (58)enzyme (19)heme (11)gene expression (10)nucleus (9)genome (5)cardiolipin (5)enzymes (5)are (4)nucleolus (4)genetic variants (4)tfiih (4)lipids (4)signal transduction (4)cytoplasm (4)cellular metabolism (4)cell metabolism (3)cell surface (3)ribosome (3)metalloproteins (3)cells (3)cell (3)fumarate hydratase (2)dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (2)ubiquinone (2)stress response (2)tubulin (2)cytosol (2)polysulfides (2)cytochrome c oxidase (2)xpb (2)aif (2)genes (2)ribosome biogenesis (2)chromophore (1)none (1)substrates (1)clinical notes (1)acsl4 (1)protein phosphatase 2a (1)dpscs (1)albumin (1)tissues (1)trxr (1)substrate (1)platelet aggregation (1)tbk1 (1)metabolic phenotype (1)lab results (1)intracellular ph (1)sqr (1)cellular biochemistry (1)target (1)healthy cells (1)sting (1)gene targets (1)variants (1)three-way junction (1)heme-oxygenase1 (1)ddr1 (1)cajal bodies (1)target genes (1)upr (1)mif (1)heme a3 (1)nucleic acids (1)intracellular substrates (1)hydrogen sulïŹde (h2s) (1)mt1-mmp (1)gene (1)plasma proteins (1)adenine (1)metabolic signatures (1)nuclear foci (1)mscs (1)caspase cascade (1)p65 (1)dna synthesis (1)ddb2 (1)nuclear factor (1)hmga2 (1)ecm (1)diseases (1)spliceosomal proteins (1)neurons (1)smn protein (1)nadh/nad(p)h (1)rtk clusters (1)reactive species (1)metal (1)translation initiation (1)ligand (1)lipid droplet (1)metabolic enzymes (1)pkcd (1)protein kinases (1)peripheral nervous system (1)stem cells (1)cellular targets (1)metalloenzyme (1)chemical reactions (1)4ebp1 (1)procaspase 3 (1)ump synthase (1)rbx1 (1)literature-based evidence (1)ras (1)metabolic biomarkers (1)guanine (1)metal centers (1)ccr7 (1)cytochrome p450 2e1 (1)cell nucleus (1)lung tissue (1)ph (1)stress granules (1)erythrocytes (1)hexokinase 2 (1)nucleic acid (1)nitrogen species (1)four-way junction (1)nucleolar protein (1)p21 (1)mek1/2 (1)membrane potential (1)polysulïŹdes (h2sn) (1)mek (1)annexin v (1)atp production (1)actin (1)traf5 (1)tme (1)cytoskeleton (1)proteoforms (1)cell cycle (1)p47phox (1)metabolome (1)cellular (1)aldoa (1)oxidants (1)zbp1 (1)cellular machines (1)atp (1)actin filaments (1)disease network (1)lipid damage (1)focal adhesions (1)p97 (1)protein sequence (1)xpc (1)whole cell (1)p38 (1)plectin (1)plasmids (1)propidium iodide (1)nadph oxidase 1 (nox1) (1)hdac enzymes (1)
▾ Targets — Nucleic acids (44)
▾ Targets — Membrane / Transport (15)
▾ Targets — Enzymes / Kinases (18)
▾ Targets — Transcription factors (5)
🩠 Diseases 880 ▶
▾ Diseases — Cancer (69)
▾ Diseases — Other (41)
▾ Diseases — Neurodegenerative (18)
▾ Diseases — Inflammatory / Immune (6)
▾ Diseases — Metabolic (5)
▾ Diseases — Cardiovascular (6)
▾ Diseases — Hepatic / Renal (8)
⚙ Mechanisms 800 ▶
▾ Mechanisms — ROS / Redox (65)
▾ Mechanisms — Other (96)
cell cycle arrest (16)enzyme inhibition (12)phosphorylation (5)gene expression regulation (5)cell cycle regulation (4)persulfidation (3)detoxification (3)ligand dissociation (2)sequence variants (2)mechanism of action (2)resistance (2)inactivation (2)invasion inhibition (1)er stress responses (1)hormesis (1)invasiveness (1)epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition inhibition (1)oxygen-dependent metabolism (1)aquation (1)paracellular permeability (1)translation efficiency (1)denaturation (1)sequestration (1)oxidative post-translational modification (1)lipid metabolism (1)duplex unwinding (1)unfolded protein response (1)antioxidation (1)calcium regulation (1)radical formation (1)oxidative damage (1)splicing regulation (1)cell growth arrest (1)protein destabilization (1)multivalent interactions (1)protein phosphatase 2a modulation (1)protein dislocation (1)cell growth suppression (1)proteotoxic stress (1)protein rearrangements (1)p21 translation inhibition (1)gg-ner (1)pseudohypoxia (1)hypoxic response (1)electron shuttle (1)low-barrier hydrogen bond (1)kinase inhibition (1)synthetic lethality (1)stress responses (1)mutagenesis (1)subcellular relocalization (1)weak interactions (1)proton ejection (1)metabolic fuel selection (1)posttranslational modification (1)regulatory interactions (1)proton pumps (1)genetic regulation (1)protein unfolding (1)nucleolar homeostasis (1)ligand switch (1)ribosomopathies (1)oxidation-reduction (1)induced fit (1)localization (1)genetic mutation (1)mode of action (1)nucleolar stress response (1)cell killing capacity (1)ligand exchange (1)bond breaking (1)kinase activation (1)modulation (1)diadduct formation (1)cytoskeleton modulation (1)radical-mediated reaction (1)electron self-exchange (1)protein shuttling (1)pore formation (1)cellular metabolism regulation (1)nuclear export processes (1)ion selectivity (1)cell survival suppression (1)stabilization (1)cell damage (1)mitochondrial bioenergetics (1)gene therapy (1)cytochrome p450 2e1 inhibition (1)oxidative metabolic phenotype (1)phosphorylation regulation (1)aggregation (1)downregulation (1)glutamate exchange (1)acidosis (1)dysregulated gene expression (1)glycan expression (1)
▾ Mechanisms — Signaling (51)
▾ Mechanisms — Immune modulation (21)
▾ Mechanisms — DNA damage / Repair (5)
▾ Mechanisms — Epigenetic (18)
▾ Mechanisms — Cell death (7)
▾ Mechanisms — Protein interaction (14)
▾ Mechanisms — Metabolic rewiring (8)
🔗 Ligands 659 ▶
▾ Ligands — N-donor (25)
▾ Ligands — Heterocyclic (9)
▾ Ligands — C-donor / NHC (4)
▾ Ligands — S-donor (14)
▾ Ligands — O-donor (7)
▾ Ligands — Other (8)
▾ Ligands — P-donor (2)
▾ Ligands — Peptide / Protein (4)
▾ Ligands — Macrocyclic (3)
▾ Ligands — Polydentate (5)
🧠 Concepts 612 ▶
▾ Concepts — Other biomedical (178)
medicinal chemistry (122)photoactivated (27)cell biology (13)chemotherapy (11)metabolism (10)biochemistry (9)artificial intelligence (7)large language models (7)systems biology (6)information retrieval (5)precision medicine (5)gene regulation (5)data mining (5)chemoprevention (4)cheminformatics (4)therapeutic target (4)mitophagy (4)immunology (4)genetics (4)biomedical research (3)large language model (3)biomedical literature (3)hydrogen bonding (3)post-translational modifications (3)chemotherapy resistance (3)variant interpretation (3)immunometabolism (3)physiology (2)clinical practice (2)evidence extraction (2)biotransformation (2)metabolic regulation (2)physiological relevance (2)chemical biology (2)cell cycle progression (2)immunomodulation (2)biophysics (2)protein modification (2)biopharmaceutics (2)immunity (2)in vitro modeling (2)post-translational modification (2)targeted therapy (2)predictive modeling (2)therapy resistance (2)desiccant efficiency (1)multimodal data integration (1)stereochemistry (1)variant evaluation (1)epithelial-mesenchymal transition (1)metalloprotein (1)genetic screening (1)self-assembly (1)personalized therapy (1)protein function prediction (1)cellular mechanisms (1)protein targeting (1)evidence-based medicine (1)photophysics (1)protein modifications (1)translational research (1)paracellular transport (1)helicase mechanism (1)chemiosmosis (1)polarizability (1)nonequilibrium (1)genotype characterization (1)nuclear shape (1)nutrient dependency (1)metabolic engineering (1)interactome (1)therapies (1)probing (1)multiscale analysis (1)reactive species interactome (1)tissue-specific (1)pharmaceutics (1)knowledge extraction (1)metabolic activities (1)protein function (1)chemical ontology (1)proton delocalization (1)permeability (1)biomarkers (1)prediction tool (1)mechanisms of action (1)protein-ligand binding affinity prediction (1)short hydrogen bonds (1)chemical language models (1)biomedical informatics (1)organelle function (1)microbiome (1)pathogenesis (1)mechanistic framework (1)biosignatures (1)cellular stress response (1)ion-selective electrodes (1)multimodal fusion (1)gasotransmitter (1)carbon metabolism (1)bioengineering (1)ion association (1)enzyme mechanism (1)symmetry breaking (1)micropolarity (1)genome stability (1)scaffold (1)global health (1)clinical implications (1)cellular neurobiology (1)mesh indexing (1)llm (1)therapeutic strategy (1)ner (1)dissipative behavior (1)enzymology (1)pretrained model (1)longevity (1)profiling approaches (1)multimodal information integration (1)therapeutic implications (1)astrobiology (1)protein sequence analysis (1)selective degradation (1)mechanical properties (1)biomedical literature search (1)metabolism regulation (1)extracellular vesicles (1)protein chemistry (1)foundation model (1)data science (1)low-barrier hydrogen bonds (1)variant detection (1)synthetic biology (1)therapeutic innovation (1)therapeutic targeting (1)metabolic dependencies (1)protein data bank (1)cellular biology (1)phenotypic screening (1)immunoengineering (1)database (1)thermochemistry (1)therapeutic approaches (1)medical subject heading (1)network biology (1)inorganic chemistry (1)immunoregulation (1)ageing (1)protein interaction networks (1)hormone mimics (1)therapeutics (1)chemotherapy efficacy (1)metabolite-mediated regulation (1)regulatory landscape (1)chemical informatics (1)mental well-being (1)personalized medicine (1)cell plasticity (1)protein science (1)metabolic therapy (1)cell polarity (1)bioavailability (1)biomedicine (1)cellular stress (1)network medicine (1)energy transduction (1)boron helices (1)nucleolar biology (1)sialic acid (1)organic solvent drying (1)phenotypic analysis (1)in vivo perfusion (1)polypharmacy (1)hyperglycemia (1)phenotypic screens (1)mechanobiology (1)nuclear organization (1)
▾ Concepts — Bioinorganic (7)
▾ Concepts — Thermodynamics / Kinetics (10)
▾ Concepts — Evolution / Origin of life (9)
▾ Concepts — Nanomedicine / Delivery (2)
▾ Concepts — Cancer biology (1)
📩 Other 583 ▶
▾ Other (169)
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244 articles with selected tags
Li, Xuan, Zhang, Yuan, Zhang, Tengjiang +4 more · 2023 · Nature Publishing Group · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Tamoxifen is the frontline therapeutic agent for the estrogen receptor-positive (ER + ) subtype of breast cancer patients, which accounts for 70–80% of total breast cancer incidents. However, clinical Show more
Tamoxifen is the frontline therapeutic agent for the estrogen receptor-positive (ER + ) subtype of breast cancer patients, which accounts for 70–80% of total breast cancer incidents. However, clinical resistance to tamoxifen has become increasingly common, highlighting the need to identify the underlying cellular mechanisms. In our study, we employed a genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 loss-of-function screen and validation experiments to discover that Tafazzin (TAZ), a mitochondrial transacylase, is crucial for maintaining the cellular sensitivity of ER+ breast cancer cells to tamoxifen and other chemotherapies. Mechanistically, we found that cardiolipin, whose synthesis and maturation rely on TAZ, is required to maintain cellular sensitivity to tamoxifen. Loss of metabolic enzymatic activity of TAZ causes ERα downregulation and therapy resistance. Interestingly, we observed that TAZ deficiency also led to the upregulation of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), which in turn suppressed ERα expression and nuclear localization, thereby contributing to tamoxifen resistance. LPC is further metabolized to lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), a bioactive molecule that supports cell survival. Thus, our findings suggest that the depletion of TAZ promotes tamoxifen resistance through an LPC-LPA phospholipid synthesis axis, and targeting this lipid metabolic pathway could restore cell susceptibility to tamoxifen treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41417-023-00683-2
mitochondria synthesis
Restrepo Guerrero, Andrés G., Andrés G. Restrepo Guerrero, Valeria R. Martinez +11 more · 2023 · Springer US · Springer · added 2026-04-20
This study is based on the premise that the application of chemical synthesis strategies to structurally modify commercial drugs by complexation with biometals is a valid procedure to improve their bi Show more
This study is based on the premise that the application of chemical synthesis strategies to structurally modify commercial drugs by complexation with biometals is a valid procedure to improve their biological effects. Our purpose is to synthesize a compound with greater efficacy than the original drug, able to enhance its antihypertensive and cardiac pharmacological activity. Herein, the structure of the coordination compound of Zn(II) and the antihypertensive drug olmesartan, [Zn(Olme)(H2O)2] (ZnOlme), is presented. After 8 weeks of treatment in SHR male rats, ZnOlme displayed a better blood pressure-lowering activity compared with olmesartan, with a noticeable effect even in the first weeks of treatment, while ZnCl2 showed similar results than the control. ZnOlme also reduced left ventricle (LV) weight and left ventricle/tibia length ratio (LV/TL), posterior wall thickness (PWT), and intraventricular septum in diastole (IVSd) suggesting its potential to prevent LV hypertrophy. Besides, ZnOlme reduced interstitial fibrosis (contents of collagen types I and III, responsible for giving rigidity and promoting vascular elasticity, respectively). The recovery of heart function was also evidenced by fractional shortening (diastolic left ventricular/systolic left ventricular) diameter determinations. Furthermore, ZnOlme increased the antioxidant capacity and prevented cardiac oxidative stress: it enhanced the reduction of reactive oxygen species generation, exerted a significant decrease in lipid peroxidation and enhanced glutathione contents in heart tissues compared to the control, Zn, and olmesartan treatments. Our results demonstrate that continuous oral administration of ZnOlme causes a better antihypertensive effect and grants enhancement of cardioprotection through antioxidant activity, in combination with hemodynamic improvement. Graphical Abstract Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12011-023-03670-8
ROS Zn synthesis
TA Kalyanaraman, N Daver, M Mahendra +242 more · 2023 · Expert opinion on therapeutic targets · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-20
TA Kalyanaraman, N Daver, M Mahendra, X Zhang, CV Dang, TM Ashton, WG McKenna, LA Kunz-Schughart, Y Xu, D Xue, A Bankhead, M Huang, CR Myers, Y Wang, B Kalyanaraman, SK Biswas, RAJ Smith, CM Porteous, AM Gane, MP Murphy, RC Hartley, E Fokas, M Benej, X Hong, S Vibhute, M Nishida, N Yamashita, T Ogawa, K Chandran, D Aggarwal, RQ Migrino, D Graham, NN Huynh, CA Hamilton, T Capeloa, J Krzystyniak, D d’Hose, JA Van de Velde, AC Rodriguez, NG Yoon, H Lee, SY Kim, S Yoshida, S Tsutsumi, G Muhlebach, A Rasola, L Neckers, D Picard, G Cheng, H Karoui, M Hardy, F Weinberg, R Hamanaka, WW Wheaton, B Fink, L Coppey, E Davidson, EM Gottwald, M Duss, M Bugarski, J Pan, Y Lee, JR Molina, Y Sun, M Protopopova, J Zielonka, M AbuEid, DM McAllister, L McOlash, IK Srivastava, H Rottenberg, AB Vaidya, PD Radloff, J Philipps, M Nkeyi, W Hughes, G Leoung, F Kramer, CD Freeman, NE Klutman, KC Lamp, A Darade, S Pathak, S Sharma, R Dixon, AL Pozniak, HM Watt, GL Nixon, DM Moss, AE Shone, M Fry, M Pudney, MW Mather, E Darrouzet, M Valkova-Valchanova, M Fiorillo, R Lamb, HB Tanowitz, M Xiang, H Kim, VT Ho, N Gupta, SK Srivastava, S Tian, H Chen, W Tan, D Xiong, P Topchyan, RM Loftus, DK Finlay, G Andrejeva, JC Rathmell, X Li, M Wenes, P Romero, T Gaber, C Strehl, F Buttgereit, A Tasdogan, JM Ubellacker, SJ Morrison, B Faubert, V Ramesh, Q Zhang, LP Burton, G Deng, CD Yanes, SR Lord, AL Harris, ME McGuinness, RL Talbert, H Zhao, KD Swanson, B Zheng, L Di Magno, S Manni, F Di Pastena, SR Veiga, X Ge, CA Mercer, R Masoud, G Reyes-Castellanos, S Lac, F Janku, SH Beom, YW Moon, O Ouari, KA Boyle, J Van Wickle, RB Hill, RF Keyes, D McAllister, Z Bielcikova, J Stursa, L Krizova, K Rohlenova, K Sachaphibulkij, KER Hollinshead, SJ Parker, VV Eapen, S Stemberkova-Hubackova, R Zobalova, M Dubisova, CA Reddy, V Somepalli, T Golakoti, S Jayakumar, RS Patwardhan, D Pal, A Mattarei, M Romio, A ManagĂČ, RK Pathak, S Marrache, DA Harn, DR Boulware, MF Pullen, AS Bangdiwala, S Crunkhorn, LD Zorova, VA Popkov, EY Plotnikov, J Joseph, A Sikora, L Dong, J Neuzil, A Solmonson, RJ DeBerardinis, V Gouirand, F Guillaumond, S Vasseur, GM Fischer, A Jalali, DA Kircher, VS LeBleu, JT O’Connell, KN Gonzalez Herrera, JH Park, S Vithayathil, S Kumar, F Sotgia, D Whitaker-Menezes, UE Martinez-Outschoorn, CR Bartman, DR Weilandt, Y Shen, YG Najjar, AV Menk, C Sander, AR Jaiswal, AJ Liu, S Pudakalakatti, MJ McManus, JL Franklin, RA Smith, B Mathieu, L Mignion, M Skwarski, DR McGowan, E Belcher, M Zielonka, B Dranka, HR Bridges, JG Fedor, JN Blaza, A Naguib, G Mathew, CR Reczek, SE Weinberg, BD Singer, EM Steinert, Z Zhao, Y Mei, Z Wang, K Vasan, M Werner, NS Chandel, EM De Francesco, B ÓzsvĂĄri, S Izreig, A Gariepy, I Kaymak, D Kolb, N Kolishetti, B Surnar Show less
Introduction: Drugs targeting mitochondria are emerging as promising antitumor therapeutics in preclinical models. However, a few of these drugs have shown clinical toxicity. Developing mitochondria- Show more
Introduction: Drugs targeting mitochondria are emerging as promising antitumor therapeutics in preclinical models. However, a few of these drugs have shown clinical toxicity. Developing mitochondria-targeted modified natural compounds and US FDA-approved drugs with increased therapeutic index in cancer is discussed as an alternative strategy. Areas Covered: Triphenylphosphonium cation (TPP + )-based drugs selectively accumulate in the mitochondria of cancer cells due to their increased negative membrane potential, target the oxidative phosphorylation proteins, inhibit mitochondrial respiration, and inhibit tumor proliferation. TPP + -based drugs exert minimal toxic side effects in rodents and humans. These drugs can sensitize radiation and immunotherapies. Expert Opinion: TPP + -based drugs targeting the tumor mitochondrial electron transport chain are a new class of oxidative phosphorylation inhibitors with varying antiproliferative and antimetastatic potencies. Some of these TPP + -based agents, which are synthesized from naturally occurring molecules and FDA-approved drugs, have been tested in mice and did not show notable toxicity, including neurotoxicity, when used at doses under the maximally tolerated dose. Thus, more effort should be directed toward the clinical translation of TPP + -based OXPHOS-inhibiting drugs in cancer prevention and treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/14728222.2023.2261631
anticancer mitochondria synthesis
Alfar Ahamed, Rendy Hosea, Shourong Wu +1 more · 2023 · International journal of molecular sciences · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
Metabolic reprogramming, especially reprogrammed glucose metabolism, is a well-known cancer hallmark related to various characteristics of tumor cells, including proliferation, survival, metastasis, a Show more
Metabolic reprogramming, especially reprogrammed glucose metabolism, is a well-known cancer hallmark related to various characteristics of tumor cells, including proliferation, survival, metastasis, and drug resistance. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) is the first and rate-limiting enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), a branch of glycolysis, that converts glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) into 6-phosphogluconolactone (6PGL). Furthermore, PPP produces ribose-5-phosphate (R5P), which provides sugar-phosphate backbones for nucleotide synthesis as well as nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), an important cellular reductant. Several studies have shown enhanced G6PD expression and PPP flux in various tumor cells, as well as their correlation with tumor progression through cancer hallmark regulation, especially reprogramming cellular metabolism, sustaining proliferative signaling, resisting cell death, and activating invasion and metastasis. Inhibiting G6PD could suppress tumor cell proliferation, promote cell death, reverse chemoresistance, and inhibit metastasis, suggesting the potential of G6PD as a target for anti-tumor therapeutic strategies. Indeed, while challenges-including side effects-still remain, small-molecule G6PD inhibitors showing potential anti-tumor effect either when used alone or in combination with other anti-tumor drugs have been developed. This review provides an overview of the structural significance of G6PD, its role in and regulation of tumor development and progression, and the strategies explored in relation to G6PD-targeted therapy. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3390/ijms242417238
review synthesis
Yan, Yuelong, Teng, Hongqi, Hang, Qinglei +12 more · 2023 · Nature Publishing Group · Nature · added 2026-04-20
The cystine transporter SLC7A11 protects cancer cells from oxidative stress by supporting glutathione synthesis. Here, the authors show that the expression level of SLC7A11 leads to different outcomes Show more
The cystine transporter SLC7A11 protects cancer cells from oxidative stress by supporting glutathione synthesis. Here, the authors show that the expression level of SLC7A11 leads to different outcomes depending on context, so high expression promotes primary tumour growth but promotes disulfide stress under oxidative stress conditions and impairs metastasis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-39401-9
ROS synthesis
Chao Chen, He Lv, Hao Xu +2 more · 2023 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
The exploration of ruthenium complexes as anticancer drugs has been the focus of intense investigation. In this study, we synthesized and characterized four C,N-cyclometalated ruthenium(II) co Show more
The exploration of ruthenium complexes as anticancer drugs has been the focus of intense investigation. In this study, we synthesized and characterized four C,N-cyclometalated ruthenium(II) complexes (Ru1–Ru4) coordinated with pyridine-functionalized N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) and auxiliary ligands (e.g., acetonitrile, 1,10-phenanthroline, 3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline, and 4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline). X-ray diffraction analysis showed that all of the four cycloruthenated complexes are hexa-coordinated in a typical octahedral geometry. In vitro cytotoxic studies revealed that cyclometalated Ru-NHC complexes Ru3 and Ru4 had stronger anticancer activity than their corresponding Ru-NHC precursor Ru1 and the clinically used cisplatin. For HeLa cells, Ru3 and Ru4 exhibited potent cytotoxicity with the IC50 value of 4.31 ± 0.42 ÎŒM and 3.14 ± 0.23 ÎŒM, respectively, which was approximately three times lower than that of cisplatin. More interestingly, Ru3 and Ru4 not only effectively inhibited the proliferation of HeLa cells, but also exhibited potential anti-migration activity. In the scratch wound healing assay, Ru3 and Ru4 treatment significantly reduced the wound healing rate of HUVEC cells. Mechanistic studies showed that Ru3 and Ru4 caused a dual action mode of mitochondrial membrane depolarization and endoplasmic reticulum stress and finally induced apoptosis of HeLa cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2DT03405K
HeLa NHC Ru X-ray anticancer apoptosis cyclometalating mitochondria
Feng Ren, Xiao Ding, Min Zheng +21 more · 2023 · Chemical Science · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
The application of artificial intelligence (AI) has been considered a revolutionary change in drug discovery and development. In 2020, the AlphaFold computer program predicted protein structur Show more
The application of artificial intelligence (AI) has been considered a revolutionary change in drug discovery and development. In 2020, the AlphaFold computer program predicted protein structures for the whole human genome, which has been considered a remarkable breakthrough in both AI applications and structural biology. Despite the varying confidence levels, these predicted structures could still significantly contribute to structure-based drug design of novel targets, especially the ones with no or limited structural information. In this work, we successfully applied AlphaFold to our end-to-end AI-powered drug discovery engines, including a biocomputational platform PandaOmics and a generative chemistry platform Chemistry42. A novel hit molecule against a novel target without an experimental structure was identified, starting from target selection towards hit identification, in a cost- and time-efficient manner. PandaOmics provided the protein of interest for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and Chemistry42 generated the molecules based on the structure predicted by AlphaFold, and the selected molecules were synthesized and tested in biological assays. Through this approach, we identified a small molecule hit compound for cyclin-dependent kinase 20 (CDK20) with a binding constant Kd value of 9.2 ± 0.5 ΌM (n = 3) within 30 days from target selection and after only synthesizing 7 compounds. Based on the available data, a second round of AI-powered compound generation was conducted and through this, a more potent hit molecule, ISM042-2-048, was discovered with an average Kd value of 566.7 ± 256.2 nM (n = 3). Compound ISM042-2-048 also showed good CDK20 inhibitory activity with an IC50 value of 33.4 ± 22.6 nM (n = 3). In addition, ISM042-2-048 demonstrated selective anti-proliferation activity in an HCC cell line with CDK20 overexpression, Huh7, with an IC50 of 208.7 ± 3.3 nM, compared to a counter screen cell line HEK293 (IC50 = 1706.7 ± 670.0 nM). This work is the first demonstration of applying AlphaFold to the hit identification process in drug discovery. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2SC05709C
amino-acid synthesis
Mit Joshi, Bhoomika M Patel · 2023 · Cancers · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are identified as carriers of proton ions between the mitochondrial inner membrane and the mitochondrial matrix. ATP is mainly generated through oxidative phosphorylation in Show more
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are identified as carriers of proton ions between the mitochondrial inner membrane and the mitochondrial matrix. ATP is mainly generated through oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria. The proton gradient is generated across the inner mitochondrial membrane and the mitochondrial matrix, which facilitates a smooth transfer of electrons across ETC complexes. Until now, it was thought that the role of UCPs was to break the electron transport chain and thereby inhibit the synthesis of ATP. UCPs allow protons to pass from the inner mitochondrial membrane to the mitochondrial matrix and decrease the proton gradient across the membrane, which results in decreased ATP synthesis and increased production of heat by mitochondria. In recent years, the role of UCPs in other physiological processes has been deciphered. In this review, we first highlighted the different types of UCPs and their precise location across the body. Second, we summarized the role of UCPs in different diseases, mainly metabolic disorders such as obesity and diabetes, cardiovascular complications, cancer, wasting syndrome, neurodegenerative diseases, and kidney complications. Based on our findings, we conclude that UCPs play a major role in maintaining energy homeostasis, mitochondrial functions, ROS production, and apoptosis. Finally, our findings reveal that mitochondrial uncoupling by UCPs may treat many diseases, and extensive clinical studies are required to meet the unmet need of certain diseases. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3390/cancers15051407
ROS mitochondria review synthesis
2023 · Journal of Molecular Structure · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.molstruc.2023.135963
DNA-binding amino-acid synthesis tetrazole
Jun-Jun Lu, Hong-Yan Lin, Qian-Qian Liu +2 more · 2023 · CrystEngComm · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
In this study, a new ligand, 5-(4-pyrimidinecarboxamido)-1H-tetrazol (4-H2pat), was synthesized by connecting the pyrimidine group and tetrazole group through an amide bond for the first time, Show more
In this study, a new ligand, 5-(4-pyrimidinecarboxamido)-1H-tetrazol (4-H2pat), was synthesized by connecting the pyrimidine group and tetrazole group through an amide bond for the first time, aiming to construct new POM-based metal–organic complexes (POMOCs). By using the ligand 4-H2pat, two new POMOCs, [Cu4(4-pat)2(ÎŒ2-OH)(CrMo6(OH)6O18)(H2O)3]·2H2O (1) and [Cu2(4-pat)(ÎČ-Mo8O26)0.5(H2O)3] (2), were successfully synthesized under solvothermal and hydrothermal conditions, respectively. The structures were characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, IR spectroscopy and powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD). In complex 1, the 1D [Cu4(ÎŒ2-OH)(4-pat)2]n3n+ metal–organic chains were connected by ÎŒ2-bridging [CrMo6(OH)6O18]3− (CrMo6) anions to construct a 2D layered structure. In complex 2, the 2D [Cu2(4-pat)]n2n+ metal–organic grid framework was consolidated by the ÎŒ4-bridging [ÎČ-Mo8O26]4− (Mo8) anions. The use of two different POM anion clusters results in the formation of two diverse 2D framework structures. Complexes 1 and 2 can effectively catalyze the oxidation of methyl phenyl sulfide as non-homogeneous catalysts with 97% and 95% conversions, respectively. They can also be used as electrocatalysts to prepare bulk-modified electrodes for detecting Cr(VI) and Fe(III) ions with low detection limits. In addition, the effects of different POMs on the structures and catalytic/electrocatalytic performances of the title complexes were discussed. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D3CE00269A
Cu Fe Ir X-ray catalysis synthesis tetrazole
Sonu Sheokand, Maravanji S Balakrishna · 2023 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
We describe the synthesis of a triazolyl-pyridine-based aminophosphine, N-(diphenylphosphaneyl)-6-(1-phenyl)-1H-(1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)pyridine-2-amine [2,6-{(PPh2)-N(H)(C5H3N)(C2HN3C6H5)}] [1, PN(H)N he Show more
We describe the synthesis of a triazolyl-pyridine-based aminophosphine, N-(diphenylphosphaneyl)-6-(1-phenyl)-1H-(1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)pyridine-2-amine [2,6-{(PPh2)-N(H)(C5H3N)(C2HN3C6H5)}] [1, PN(H)N hereafter], and its palladium and platinum complexes and their catalytic application. The reaction of 1 with [M(COD)Cl2] (M = Pd or Pt) afforded the cationic complex [(MCl){PN(H)N}-Îș3-P,N,N]Cl [M = Pd (2) or Pt (3)]. Alternatively, compounds 2 and 3 were also synthesized by treating [2,6-{H2N(C5H3N)(C2HN3C6H5)}] (A) with [M(COD)Cl2] (M = Pd or Pt), followed by the addition of stoichiometric amounts of PPh2Cl and Et3N. The neutral, dearomatized complexes [(MCl){PNN}-Îș3-P,N,N] [M = Pd (4) or Pt (5)] were prepared by the deprotonation of the NH of 2 and 3 with 1 equiv of tBuOK. Compounds 4 and 5 were also synthesized stepwise by treating [2,6-{H2N(C5H3N)(C2HN3C6H5)}] (A) with [M(COD)Cl2] (M = Pd or Pt) to give intermediate complexes [{MCl2}2,6-{NH2(C5H3N)(C2HN3C6H5)-Îș2-N,N}] [M = Pd (B) or Pt (C)], which were subsequently phosphinated. The in situ-generated PNN ligand-stabilized Pd nanoparticles from compound 2 catalyzed the annulation of o-bromobenzaldehyde with alkynes to yield indenone derivatives. Mechanistic investigations suggested that the reaction was catalyzed by Pd nanoparticles (Pd@2) generated from compound 2 and proceeded through sequential oxidative addition, alkyne insertion, and reductive elimination steps to produce indanone products. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c01273
Pd Pt drug-delivery phosphine pyridine synthesis
Liam J. Stephens, Elena Dallerba, Jenisi T. A. Kelderman +5 more · 2023 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Twelve Re(I) tricarbonyl diimine (2,2â€Č-bipyridine and 1,10-phenanthroline) complexes with thiotetrazolato ligands have been synthesised and fully characterised. Structural characterisation rev Show more
Twelve Re(I) tricarbonyl diimine (2,2â€Č-bipyridine and 1,10-phenanthroline) complexes with thiotetrazolato ligands have been synthesised and fully characterised. Structural characterisation revealed the capacity of the tetrazolato ligand to bind to the Re(I) centre through either the S atom or the N atom with crystallography revealing most complexes being bound to the N atom. However, an example where the Re(I) centre is linked via the S atom has been identified. In solution, the complexes exist as an equilibrating mixture of linkage isomers, as suggested by comparison of their NMR spectra at room temperature and 373 K, as well as 2D exchange spectroscopy. The complexes are photoluminescent in fluid solution at room temperature, with emission either at 625 or 640 nm from the metal-to-ligand charge transfer excited states of triplet multiplicity, which seems to be exclusively dependent on the nature of the diimine ligand. The oxygen-sensitive excited state lifetime decay ranges between 12.5 and 27.5 ns for the complexes bound to 2,2â€Č-bipyrdine, or between 130.6 and 155.2 ns for those bound to 1.10-phenanthroline. Quantum yields were measured within 0.4 and 1.5%. The complexes were incubated with human lung (A549), brain (T98g), and breast (MDA-MB-231) cancer cells, as well as with normal human skin fibroblasts (HFF-1), revealing low to moderate cytotoxicity, which for some compounds exceeded that of a standard anti-cancer drug, cisplatin. Low cytotoxicity combined with significant cellular uptake and photoluminescence properties provides potential for their use as cellular imaging agents. Furthermore, the complexes were assessed in disc diffusion and broth microdilution assays against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE), Escherichia coli (E. coli), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) bacterial strains, which revealed negligible antibacterial activity in the dark or after irradiation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2DT03237F
A549 NMR Re antibacterial anticancer imaging pyridine synthesis
Haowen Jiang, Clifford Jiajun He, Albert M Li +4 more · 2023 · Molecular cancer research : MCR · added 2026-04-20
UNLABELLED: When the electron transport chain (ETC) function is impaired, cancer cells rely on reductive carboxylation (RC) to convert α-ketoglutarate (αKG) to citrate for macromolecular synthesis, th Show more
UNLABELLED: When the electron transport chain (ETC) function is impaired, cancer cells rely on reductive carboxylation (RC) to convert α-ketoglutarate (αKG) to citrate for macromolecular synthesis, thereby promoting tumor growth. Currently, there is no viable therapy to inhibit RC for cancer treatment. In this study, we demonstrate that the mitochondrial uncoupler treatment effectively inhibits RC in cancer cells. Mitochondrial uncoupler treatment activates the ETC and increases the NAD+/NADH ratio. Using U-13C-glutamine and 1-13C-glutamine tracers, we show that mitochondrial uncoupling accelerates the oxidative tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and blocks RC under hypoxia, in von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor-deficient kidney cancer cells, or under anchorage-independent growth condition. Together, these data demonstrate that mitochondrial uncoupling redirects α-KG from RC back to the oxidative TCA cycle, highlighting that the NAD+/NADH ratio is one key switch that determines the metabolic fate of α-KG. Inhibiting RC could be a key mechanism by which mitochondrial uncouplers inhibit tumor growth. IMPLICATIONS: Mitochondrial uncoupling is a novel strategy to target RC in cancer. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-23-0049
carboxylate mitochondria synthesis
Robert F Keyes, Donna McAllister, Michael B Dwinell +1 more · 2023 · STAR protocols · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Triphenylphosphonium (TPP+) compounds like mito-metformin (MMe) target cancer cells by exploiting their hyperpolarized mitochondrial membrane potential. Here, we present a protocol for synthesizing TP Show more
Triphenylphosphonium (TPP+) compounds like mito-metformin (MMe) target cancer cells by exploiting their hyperpolarized mitochondrial membrane potential. Here, we present a protocol for synthesizing TPP+ analogs with selectivity for mammalian cancer cells, reduced toxicity, and quantifiability using fluorine-19 nuclear magnetic resonance (19F-NMR). We describe steps for treating mammalian cells with mitochondria-targeted compounds, treating and preparing mouse tissue with these compounds, and 19F-NMR detection of MMe analogs in cells and tissue. TPP+-conjugated metformin analogs include para-methoxy (pMeO-MMe) and para-trifluoromethyl MMe (pCF3-MMe) and meta-trifluoromethyl MMe (mCF3-MMe). Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2023.102437
NMR mitochondria synthesis
Li-Tao Tan, Ting-Xiao Shen, Jing-Yi Jiang +7 more · 2022 · RSC Advances · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Transition metal coordination complexes have provided cancer treatment with new insights to overcome the limitations of current chemotherapeutic agents. Utilization of bifunctional tetrazole–carboxyla Show more
Transition metal coordination complexes have provided cancer treatment with new insights to overcome the limitations of current chemotherapeutic agents. Utilization of bifunctional tetrazole–carboxylate ligands with Zn(II) obtained two self-assembled complexes [Zn(HL1)(bipy)3/2(H2O)]·CH3OH·4(H2O) (1) (H3L1 = 1,3,5-tri(2-carboxymethyltetrazol-5-yl) benzene) and [Zn(L2)2(H2O)2]2·2H2O (2) (HL2 = (5-pyridin-3-yl-tetrazol-2-yl)-acetic acid). The X-ray diffraction results showed that the two complexes displayed a two-dimensional (2D) layer structure and a one-dimensional (1D) layer structure. Nanocoprecipitation with DSPE-PEG-2000 resulted in the formation of complex nanoparticles (NPS) with excellent water dispersion. In vitro CCK-8 assay indicated the two NPs exert high cytotoxicity and sensitivity and a low half-maximum inhibitory concentration (IC50) towards HeLa than HepG2 cells. In addition, the cytotoxicity was also confirmed by live/dead co-stained experiments. The presented experimental results showed the 1 and 2 NPs were capable of inhibiting cell proliferation in vitro and may help design coordination complex-based anticancer candidates for cancer cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2RA04768C
Co HeLa HepG2 X-ray Zn anticancer carboxylate coordination-chemistry
Anna Chandrasekar Murali, Prakash Nayak, Krishnan Venkatasubbaiah · 2022 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Tetra-coordinated boron compounds offer a plethora of luminescent materials. Different chelation around the boron center (O,O-, N,C-, N,O-, and N,N-) has been explored to tune the electronic a Show more
Tetra-coordinated boron compounds offer a plethora of luminescent materials. Different chelation around the boron center (O,O-, N,C-, N,O-, and N,N-) has been explored to tune the electronic and photophysical properties of tetra-coordinated boron compounds. A number of fascinating molecules with interesting properties such as aggregation induced emission, mechanochromism and tunable emission by changing the solvent polarity were realised. Owing to their rich and unique properties, some of the molecules have shown applications in making optoelectronic devices, probes and so on. This perspective provides an overview of the recent developments of tetra-coordinated boron compounds and their potential applications. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2DT00160H
imaging review synthesis
Aleksei Agapov, Anna Olina, Andrey Kulbachinskiy · 2022 · Nucleic acids research · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-20
Cellular DNA is continuously transcribed into RNA by multisubunit RNA polymerases (RNAPs). The continuity of transcription can be disrupted by DNA lesions that arise from the activities of cellular en Show more
Cellular DNA is continuously transcribed into RNA by multisubunit RNA polymerases (RNAPs). The continuity of transcription can be disrupted by DNA lesions that arise from the activities of cellular enzymes, reactions with endogenous and exogenous chemicals or irradiation. Here, we review available data on translesion RNA synthesis by multisubunit RNAPs from various domains of life, define common principles and variations in DNA damage sensing by RNAP, and consider existing controversies in the field of translesion transcription. Depending on the type of DNA lesion, it may be correctly bypassed by RNAP, or lead to transcriptional mutagenesis, or result in transcription stalling. Various lesions can affect the loading of the templating base into the active site of RNAP, or interfere with nucleotide binding and incorporation into RNA, or impair RNAP translocation. Stalled RNAP acts as a sensor of DNA damage during transcription-coupled repair. The outcome of DNA lesion recognition by RNAP depends on the interplay between multiple transcription and repair factors, which can stimulate RNAP bypass or increase RNAP stalling, and plays the central role in maintaining the DNA integrity. Unveiling the mechanisms of translesion transcription in various systems is thus instrumental for understanding molecular pathways underlying gene regulation and genome stability. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac174
DNA-binding review sensor synthesis
Elena Dallerba, David Hartnell, Mark J. Hackett +2 more · 2022 · Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
AbstractWell‐defined copolymers containing luminescent iridium and hybrid iridium/rhenium fragments are prepared utilizing parent poly(n‐butyl acrylamide‐co‐N‐(1H‐tetrazol‐5‐yl) acrylamide) as macromo Show more
AbstractWell‐defined copolymers containing luminescent iridium and hybrid iridium/rhenium fragments are prepared utilizing parent poly(n‐butyl acrylamide‐co‐N‐(1H‐tetrazol‐5‐yl) acrylamide) as macromolecular chelating species. The parent (co)polymers are prepared via the modification of a precursor poly(pentafluorophenyl acrylate) (polyPFPA) homopolymer, prepared by reversible addition‐fragmentation chain transfer polymerization, with n‐butylamine and 5‐aminotetrazole. Reaction of the parent copolymers with [Ir2(ppy)4(Ό−Cl2)] (ppy = 2‐phenylpyridine) yields modified copolymers containing the Ir(ppy)2 fragment as a pendent group. Attachment of the Ir species is confirmed by a combination of photophysical studies, UV–Vis spectroscopy, and visually under irradiation with UV light. Importantly, it is demonstrated that the chelation of the Ir(ppy)2 fragment to a polymeric scaffold does not impact the fundamental photophysical properties of the Ir species. Attachment of a second luminescent metal species, Re(CO)3(phen) (phen = 1,10‐phenanthroline), gives hybrid materials containing Re(I) and Ir(III). The photophysical properties of these hybrid materials are consistent with the presence of both metal species and indicate the occurrence of energy transfer phenomena from the polymer‐bound Ir to Re metal centers. Finally, it is demonstrated that the Ir modified polymers and the Ir/Re hybrid materials offer potential in tissue imaging applications with scope to tune both luminescent properties and biological specificity as evidenced from preliminary brain tissue staining experiments. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/macp.202200021
Co Ir Re imaging pyridine synthesis tetrazole
Julia A. Eremina, Eremina, Julia A., Ksenia S. Smirnova +9 more · 2022 · Springer International Publishing · Springer · added 2026-04-20
In this study, Ni(II) and Co(II) complexes [Co(H2O)2L2] (1), [Ni(H2O)2L2] (2), [Co(phen)L2] (3), [Ni(phen)L2]·2H2O·EtOH (4·2H2O), and [Ni(phen)2(H2O)L]·L·2H2O (5), where L—4,5-dichloro-isothiazole-3-c Show more
In this study, Ni(II) and Co(II) complexes [Co(H2O)2L2] (1), [Ni(H2O)2L2] (2), [Co(phen)L2] (3), [Ni(phen)L2]·2H2O·EtOH (4·2H2O), and [Ni(phen)2(H2O)L]·L·2H2O (5), where L—4,5-dichloro-isothiazole-3-carboxylate anion and phen—1,10-phenanthroline are reported. All complexes have been characterized by physicochemical and spectroscopic methods. Mass spectrometry and UV–Vis spectroscopy have been used to show the behavior of complexes in ethanol solution and phosphate buffer saline. Crystal structures of mononuclear complexes 1, 4 and 5 have been determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. In the structure of 4, mononuclear units have been found to form infinite zigzag chains due to the presence of Cl‱‱‱Cl non-covalent interactions which can be regarded as halogen bonding. All complexes have been screened in vitro for their cytotoxic activity against Hep2 cancer cell line. The complexes obtained showed no activity (IC50 > 50 ”M) in comparison with structurally related Cu(II) complex [Cu(phen)(H2O)L2] exhibiting dose-dependent toxicity comparable to that of cisplatin (IC50 = 3.06 ± 0.07 ”M (Cu(II) complex), IC50 = 9.2 ± 0.5 ”M (cisplatin)). DNA binding constants were determined using absorption titration: Cu(II), Ni(II) and Co(II) complexes possessed similar DNA binding efficacy (Kb ~ 104). Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11243-021-00490-4
Co Cu DNA-binding Ni X-ray anticancer carboxylate pyridine
Anil Verma, Balwinder Kaur, Sneha Venugopal +5 more · 2022 · Chemical Biology & Drug Design · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-20
Carcinoma, characterized by abnormal growth of cells and tissue, is a ubiquitously leading cause of mortality across the globe due to some carcinogenic factors. Currently, several anticancer agents ar Show more
Carcinoma, characterized by abnormal growth of cells and tissue, is a ubiquitously leading cause of mortality across the globe due to some carcinogenic factors. Currently, several anticancer agents are commercially available in the global market. However, due to their resistance and cost, researchers are gaining more interest in developing newer novel potential anticancer agents. In the search for new drugs for clinical use, the tetrazole ring system has emerged as an exciting prospect in the optimization studies of promising lead molecules. Among the various heterocyclic agents, tetrazole-containing compounds have shown significant promise in the treatment of a wide range of diseases, particularly cancer. Here, in this review, we focused on several synthetic approaches for the synthesis of tetrazole analogs, their targets for treating cancer along with the biological activity of some of the recently reported tetrazole-containing anticancer agents. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/cbdd.14103
anticancer review synthesis tetrazole
Xin‐Ya Shi, Li‐Tao Tan, Yu‐Jie Zhong +8 more · 2022 · European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
Abstract As a kind of multifunctional materials with high porosity, tunable pore structure and easy functionalization, coordination complexes have been widely used in various fields. Here, three compl Show more
Abstract As a kind of multifunctional materials with high porosity, tunable pore structure and easy functionalization, coordination complexes have been widely used in various fields. Here, three complexes were prepared by self‐assembly with Co(II) ions using tetrazolylacetic acids as ligands, 2,2â€Č,2â€Čâ€Č‐(benzene‐1,3,5‐triyltris(2 H ‐tetrazole‐5,2‐diyl)) triacetic acid (H 3 tzpha), 2‐(5‐(pyrazin‐2‐yl)‐2 H ‐tetrazol‐2‐yl) propanoic acid (Hpztzma) and 2‐(5‐(pyridin‐2‐yl)‐2 H ‐tetrazol‐2‐yl) acetic acid (Hpytza), and were characterized by X‐ray crystallography. These complexes can also self‐assemble into nanoparticles (NPs) in aqueous solution by nanocoprecipitation. In vitro CCK‐8 assay on three kind of human cancer cells (HeLa, HepG2 and Huh7) cells showed these Co(II) complexes have the best cytotoxicity against HeLa cells. And complex 1 had a half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC 50 value) of 14.8 ÎŒg mL −1 , which was superior to 16.5 ÎŒg mL −1 and 15.2 ÎŒg mL −1 of complex 2 and 3 . In addition, the effect of different ligands on cancer cell ablation was explored. The results showed the three NPs can effectively inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells in vitro and provided a strategy on designing highly efficient anticancer materials based on coordination complexes. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/ejic.202200097
Co HeLa HepG2 X-ray anticancer carboxylate coordination-chemistry drug-delivery
Su-Wen Zhu, Mengjie Ye, Xianbin Ma +6 more · 2022 · Acta biomaterialia · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
As the prominent feature of the development and progression of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is immunosuppression, therapeutic strategies to restore antitumor immunity have shown promi Show more
As the prominent feature of the development and progression of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is immunosuppression, therapeutic strategies to restore antitumor immunity have shown promising prospects. The efficacy of chemotherapy, a mainstay in HNSCC treatment, is exemplified by cytotoxic effects as well as immunostimulation, whereas compensatory activation of prosurvival signals in tumor tissues may compromise its efficacy. Aberrant activation of Src is present in many human malignancies including HNSCC, and is implicated in chemotherapy resistance. In this regard, tumor-microenvironment-responsive prodrug nanomicelles (PDO NPs) are rationally designed to combine chemotherapy (oxaliplatin, OXA) and Src inhibitors (dasatinib, DAS) for HNSCC therapy. PDO NPs are constructed by chemically modifying small-molecule prodrugs (DAS-OXA) loaded in block copolymer iPDPA with pH-triggered transforming capability. PDO NPs can controllably release drugs in response to tumor acidity, thus increasing tumor accumulation and therapeutic efficacy. Moreover, PDO NPs can elicit pyroptosis of tumor cells and induce T-cell-mediated antitumor immunity in murine HNSCC models. In summary, nanoprodrugs integrating Src inhibitors enhance the immunological effects of chemotherapy and provide insight into promising approaches for augmenting immunochemotherapy for HNSCC. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: In this study, pH-responsive nanomicelles (PDO NPs) were constructed by loading a small molecular prodrug synthesized by the Src inhibitor dasatinib and the chemotherapy drug oxaliplatin into the amphiphilic block copolymer iPDPA to improve the immunological effects of chemotherapy for HNSCC. These nanomicelles can efficiently accumulate in tumor cells and achieve pH-responsive drug release. The PDO NPs can induce pyroptosis of tumor cells and potentiate antitumor immunity in subcutaneous and syngenetic orthotopic HNSCC mouse models, which may present a promising strategy to enhance immunochemotherapy for HNSCC. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2022.10.051
anticancer prodrug synthesis
Mianli Bian, Rong Fan, Zhibin Yang +4 more · 2022 · Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Immunogenic cell death (ICD) can engage a specific immune response and establish a long-term immunity in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Herein, we design and synthesize a series of Pt(II)-N-heterocyc Show more
Immunogenic cell death (ICD) can engage a specific immune response and establish a long-term immunity in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Herein, we design and synthesize a series of Pt(II)-N-heterocyclic carbene (Pt(II)-NHC) complexes derived from 4,5-diarylimidazole, which show strong anticancer activities in vitro. Among them, 2c displays much higher anticancer activities than cisplatin and other Pt(II)-NHC complexes, especially in HCC cancer cells. In addition, we find that 2c is a type II ICD inducer, which can successfully induce endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) accompanied by reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and finally lead to the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) in HCC cells. Importantly, 2c shows a great anti-HCC potential in a vaccination mouse model and leads to the in vivo immune cell activation in the CCl4-induced liver injury model. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c01248
NHC Pt ROS anticancer immunogenic synthesis
Jyotsana N, Ta KT, DelGiorno KE · 2022 · Frontiers in Oncology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-20
SLC7A11/xCT is an antiporter that mediates the uptake of extracellular cystine in exchange for glutamate. Cystine is reduced to cysteine, which is a rate-limiting precursor in glutathione synthesis; a Show more
SLC7A11/xCT is an antiporter that mediates the uptake of extracellular cystine in exchange for glutamate. Cystine is reduced to cysteine, which is a rate-limiting precursor in glutathione synthesis; a process that protects cells from oxidative stress and is, therefore, critical to cell growth, proliferation, and metabolism. SLC7A11 is expressed in different tissues and plays diverse functional roles in the pathophysiology of various diseases, including cancer, by regulating the processes of redox homeostasis, metabolic flexibility/nutrient dependency, immune system function, and ferroptosis. SLC7A11 expression is associated with poor prognosis and drug resistance in cancer and, therefore, represents an important therapeutic target. In this review, we discuss the molecular functions of SLC7A11 in normal versus diseased tissues, with a special focus on how it regulates gastrointestinal cancers. Further, we summarize current therapeutic strategies targeting SLC7A11 as well as novel avenues for treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.858462
Fe ROS review synthesis
Ling Gao, Luyao Chen, Yu Peng +5 more · 2022 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
In this work, three iridium(III) tetrazolato complexes have been designed and successfully synthesized. Beside photophysical properties, their performances in protein staining have been compre Show more
In this work, three iridium(III) tetrazolato complexes have been designed and successfully synthesized. Beside photophysical properties, their performances in protein staining have been comprehensively investigated in this work for the first time. Notably, these iridium(III) tetrazolato complexes with high quantum efficiency exhibited much better protein staining properties than the commercial agent Coomassie Brilliant Blue (CBB) under the same experimental conditions, which may pave the way to explore new efficient iridium-based protein staining agents both for commercial markets and academic research in the future. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2DT02564G
Ir amino-acid synthesis tetrazole
2022 · SSRN Electronic Journal · added 2026-04-20
no PDF DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.4300116
X-ray synthesis
Borshchevskiy, Valentin, Kovalev, Kirill, Round, Ekaterina +16 more · 2022 · Nature Publishing Group · Nature · added 2026-04-20
High-resolution (≀1.2 Å) structures of functional states of bacteriorhodopsin reveal the molecular mechanism for generating a membrane proton electrochemical gradient, a key event of cell bioenergetic Show more
High-resolution (≀1.2 Å) structures of functional states of bacteriorhodopsin reveal the molecular mechanism for generating a membrane proton electrochemical gradient, a key event of cell bioenergetics driving ATP synthesis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41594-022-00762-2
synthesis
Mahmoud AbuEid, Robert F Keyes, Donna McAllister +6 more · 2022 · iScience · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Triphenylphosphonium (TPP+) conjugated compounds selectively target cancer cells by exploiting their hyperpolarized mitochondrial membrane potential. To date, studies have focused on modifying either Show more
Triphenylphosphonium (TPP+) conjugated compounds selectively target cancer cells by exploiting their hyperpolarized mitochondrial membrane potential. To date, studies have focused on modifying either the linker or the cargo of TPP+-conjugated compounds. Here, we investigated the biological effects of direct modification to TPP+ to improve the efficacy and detection of mito-metformin (MMe), a TPP+-conjugated probe we have shown to have promising preclinical efficacy against solid cancer cells. We designed, synthesized, and tested trifluoromethyl and methoxy MMe analogs (pCF3-MMe, mCF3-MMe, and pMeO-MMe) against multiple distinct human cancer cells. pCF3-MMe showed enhanced selectivity toward cancer cells compared to MMe, while retaining the same signaling mechanism. Importantly, pCF3-MMe allowed quantitative monitoring of cellular accumulation via 19F-NMR in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, adding trifluoromethyl groups to TPP+ reduced toxicity in vivo while retaining anti-tumor efficacy, opening an avenue to de-risk these next-generation TPP+-conjugated compounds. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2022.105670
NMR mitochondria synthesis
2022 · Transition Metal Chemistry · Springer · added 2026-04-20
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11243-021-00490-4
Co Ni X-ray anticancer synthesis
María Benítez, María L. Buil, Miguel A. Esteruelas +3 more · 2022 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
The preparation of three families of phosphorescent iridium(III) emitters, including iridaoxazole derivatives, hydroxycarbene compounds, and N,C(sp3),C(sp2),O-tetradentate Show more
The preparation of three families of phosphorescent iridium(III) emitters, including iridaoxazole derivatives, hydroxycarbene compounds, and N,C(sp3),C(sp2),O-tetradentate containing complexes, has been performed starting from dimers cis-[Ir(ÎŒ2-η2-C≡CR){Îș2-C,N-(MeC6H3-py)}2]2 (R = tBu (1a), Ph (1b)). Reactions of 1a with benzamide, acetamide, phenylacetamide, and trifluoroacetamide lead to the iridaoxazole derivatives Ir{Îș2-C,O-[C(CH2tBu)NC(R)O]}{Îș2-C,N-(MeC6H3-py)}2 (R = Ph (2), Me (3), CH2Ph (4), CF3 (5)) with a fac disposition of carbons and heteroatoms around the metal center. In 2-methyltetrahydrofuran and dichloromethane, water promotes the C-N rupture of the IrC-N bond of the iridaoxazole ring of 3-5 to form amidate-iridium(III)-hydroxycarbene derivatives Ir{Îș1-N-[NHC(R)O]}{Îș2-C,N-(MeC6H3-py)}2{═C(CH2tBu)OH} (R = Me (6), CH2Ph (7), CF3 (8)). In contrast to 1a, dimer 1b reacts with benzamide and acetamide to give Ir{Îș4-N,C,C',O-[py-MeC6H3-C(CH2-C6H4)NHC(R)O]}{Îș2-C,N-(MeC6H3-py)}(R = Ph (9), Me (10)), which bear a N,C(sp3),C(sp2),O-tetradentate ligand resulting from a triple coupling (an alkynyl ligand, an amide, and a coordinated aryl group) and a C-H bond activation at the metal coordination sphere. Complexes 2-4 and 6-10 are emissive upon photoexcitation, in orange (2-4), green (6-8), and yellow (9 and 10) regions, with quantum yields between low and moderate (0.01-0.50) and short lifetimes (0.2-9.0 ÎŒs). Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c03522
Ir imaging synthesis