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🏷️ Tags (8587 usages)
⚗️ 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 sul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)polysul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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42 articles with selected tags
M. V. Kashina, Kashina, M. V., M. A. Kinzhalov +1 more ¡ 2026 ¡ Pleiades Publishing ¡ added 2026-04-20
Abstract This article presents the synthesis and detailed structural investigation of a new palladium(II) heteroligand complex trans-[PdCl(CNXyl)2(C{CN(H)Xyl}2)]Cl, containing an acyclic diaminocarben Show more
Abstract This article presents the synthesis and detailed structural investigation of a new palladium(II) heteroligand complex trans-[PdCl(CNXyl)2(C{CN(H)Xyl}2)]Cl, containing an acyclic diaminocarbene ligand and two isocyanide ligands. X-ray diffraction and NMR spectroscopy revealed that complex is stabilized both in the crystal and in solution by a system of N–H···Cl– hydrogen bonds formed between one chloride anion and two N–H groups of the diaminocarbene ligand (N–H···Cl–···H–N), with calculated energies of 3.8–5.4 kcal/mol. A Cambridge Structural Database search identified 22 other palladium(II) acyclic diaminocarbene complexes with similar N–H···X···H–N (X = Cl–, Br–, O=C<, O=S<, etc.) hydrogen-bonded systems. The complex demonstrated significant antiproliferative activity against the triple-negative breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231, with an IC50 value of 5.55 ± 0.45 µM, which is four times higher than that of cisplatin. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1134/S0036023625603356
NMR Pd X-ray anticancer synthesis
Mannaa, Abdullah H., Gomaa, Esam A., Zaky, Rania R. +2 more ¡ 2025 ¡ Nature Publishing Group ¡ Nature ¡ added 2026-04-20
Copper(II), manganese(II), and mercury(II) complexes of 4-amino-5-(2-(1-pyridine-2-yl)ethylidene)hydrazinyl)-4H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thiol (H2TAP) were synthesized and characterized using CHN analysis, FT Show more
Copper(II), manganese(II), and mercury(II) complexes of 4-amino-5-(2-(1-pyridine-2-yl)ethylidene)hydrazinyl)-4H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thiol (H2TAP) were synthesized and characterized using CHN analysis, FT-IR, 1H-NMR, 13C-NMR, UV–Vis, ESR, MS, PXRD, magnetic moment measurements, molar conductance, and TG/DTA. DFT calculations indicate octahedral geometries and the neutral bidentate or tridentate chelating behavior of the ligand. Cyclic voltammetry revealed the complexes’ redox properties, and Job’s method elucidated stoichiometric compositions in solution. Biochemical assays demonstrated antimicrobial activity against Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Candida albicans. The MnII complex exhibited potent antitumor activity against HepG-2 cells. Antioxidant and DNA binding studies showed promising results, with docking investigations indicating strong interactions between the ligand/complexes and target proteins (PDB: 1YWN) and DNA (PDB: 8EC1), suggesting therapeutic potential. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-15782-3
Cu DFT DNA-binding Ir NMR antibacterial anticancer coordination-chemistry
Vipul Navinchandra Panchal, Jan-Åke Husmann, Kaja Günther +3 more · 2025 · RSC Medicinal Chemistry · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Structured RNAs are increasingly explored as novel pharmacological targets for a range of diseases. Therefore, evaluating methods for RNA-focused hit discovery is crucial. Biolayer Interferome Show more
Structured RNAs are increasingly explored as novel pharmacological targets for a range of diseases. Therefore, evaluating methods for RNA-focused hit discovery is crucial. Biolayer Interferometry (BLI), a label-free technique that detects biomolecular interactions by measuring changes in white light interference near the sensor surface, offers high throughput and multiplexing capabilities. While BLI has been widely adopted for protein-targeted screening, its application in RNA-targeted drug discovery remains largely unexplored. In this study, we demonstrate the effective use of BLI to investigate RNA–small molecule interactions using three different riboswitches, which are potential targets for novel antibiotics. Furthermore, we describe the successful use of BLI to identify fragment binders of these RNA targets. We combined the BLI experiments with ligand-based NMR as an orthogonal validation method and were able to identify seven competitive fragment binders of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) riboswitch, each featuring scaffolds distinct from the previously known ligands. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D5MD00673B
NMR amino-acid sensor
Nafie MS, Abu-Elsaoud AM, Diab MK ¡ 2025 ¡ Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal ¡ Elsevier ¡ added 2026-04-20
Computational metabolomics will be established in drug discovery and research on complex biological networks. This field of research enhances the detection of metabolic biomarkers and the predict Show more
Computational metabolomics will be established in drug discovery and research on complex biological networks. This field of research enhances the detection of metabolic biomarkers and the prediction of molecular interactions by combining multiscale analysis with in silico and molecular docking methods. These include nuclear magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry, and innovative bioinformatics, which enable the accurate generation and characterization of metabolomes. Molecular docking is a crucial tool for simulating the interaction between ligands and receptors, thereby facilitating the identification of potential therapeutics. It also discusses the potential of metabolomics to inform drug modes of action, from pharmacokinetics to forecasting toxicity, thereby streamlining drug development pipelines. We highlight applications in anticancer, antimicrobial, and antiviral drug discovery and explain how these computational models can accelerate target validation and enhance the accuracy of therapeutic strategies. In addition, this review addresses the current challenges and future directions for computational techniques in conjunction with experimental data to advance personalized medicine. In conclusion, this review aims to highlight the prospective approaches of computational metabolomics and molecular docking that identify evolutionary adaptive metabolisms of multiscale biological systems through their synergistic utilization to overcome the key hurdles involved in both drug discovery and metabolomic research. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2025.07.016
NMR antibacterial anticancer docking review
Simone Scintilla, Daniele Rossetto, Martin ClÊmancey +8 more ¡ 2025 ¡ Chemical Science ¡ Royal Society of Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
Conditions that led to the synthesis of iron-sulfur clusters coordinated to tripeptides with a single thiolate ligand were investigated by UV-vis, NMR, EPR, and MĂśssbauer spectroscopies and by electro Show more
Conditions that led to the synthesis of iron-sulfur clusters coordinated to tripeptides with a single thiolate ligand were investigated by UV-vis, NMR, EPR, and MĂśssbauer spectroscopies and by electrochemistry. Increasing concentrations of hydrosulfide correlated with the formation of higher nuclearity iron-sulfur clusters from mononuclear to [2Fe-2S] to [4Fe-4S] and finally to a putative, nitrogenase-like [6Fe-9S] complex. Increased nuclearity was also associated with decreased dynamics and increased stability. The synthesis of higher nuclearity iron-sulfur clusters is compatible with shallow, alkaline bodies of water on the surface of the early Earth, although other niche environments are possible. Because of the plasticity of such complexes, the type of iron-sulfur cluster formed on the prebiotic Earth would have been greatly influenced by the chemical environment and the thiolate containing scaffold. The discovery that all the major classes of iron-sulfur clusters easily form under prebiotically reasonable conditions broadens the chemistry accessible to protometabolic systems. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d5sc00524h
Fe NMR synthesis thiolate
Daniele Rossetto, Serge Nader, Corinna L Kufner +10 more ¡ 2025 ¡ Chemical Science ¡ Royal Society of Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
The transition from unregulated, prebiotic chemistry to metabolic-like systems capable of supporting an evolving protocell has remained difficult to explain. One hypothesis is that early catalysts beg Show more
The transition from unregulated, prebiotic chemistry to metabolic-like systems capable of supporting an evolving protocell has remained difficult to explain. One hypothesis is that early catalysts began to prune the chemical landscape in a manner that facilitated the emergence of modern-day enzymes. As enzymes frequently rely on the intrinsic reactivity of metal ions, it follows that these early catalysts may have been metal ions coordinated to prebiotic peptides that have remained as core structures within extant proteins. Here, we demonstrate that UV light directly selects for the types of metal-binding peptide motifs found in biology. This is because bare cysteine is much more susceptible to photolysis than cysteine bound by a metal ion. Therefore, peptides with greater affinity for environmentally available metal ions, such as Fe2+ or Zn2+, are more stable. Our results are supported by mass spectrometry, calorimetry, X-ray absorption, NMR spectroscopy, transient absorption pump probe spectroscopy, and excited-state quantum-chemical calculations. Photostability arises from the ability of the metal ion to engage transiently generated reactive radical centers in a manner that prevents subsequent degradative processes. The data are consistent with the enrichment of a restricted set of high affinity, extant-like metallopeptides in surficial environments on the early Earth. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d5sc02170g
NMR X-ray amino-acid catalysis
Tagari EV, Sifnaiou E, Tsolis T +1 more ¡ 2024 ¡ International journal of molecular sciences ¡ MDPI ¡ added 2026-04-20
Monofunctional platinum complexes offer a promising alternative to cisplatin in cancer chemotherapy, showing a unique mechanism of action. Their ability to induce minor helix distortions effectively i Show more
Monofunctional platinum complexes offer a promising alternative to cisplatin in cancer chemotherapy, showing a unique mechanism of action. Their ability to induce minor helix distortions effectively inhibits DNA transcription. In our study, we synthesized and characterized three monofunctional Pt(II) complexes with the general formula [Pt(en)(L)Cl]NO3, where en = ethylenediamine, and L = pyridine (py), 2-methylpyridine (2-mepy), and 2-phenylpyridine (2-phpy). The hydrolysis rates of [Pt(en)(py)Cl]NO3 (1) and [Pt(en)(2-mepy)Cl]NO3 (2) decrease with the bulkiness of the auxiliary ligand with k(1) = 2.28 ± 0.15 × 10-4 s-1 and k(2) = 8.69 ± 0.98 × 10-5 s-1 at 298 K. The complex [Pt(en)(2-phpy)Cl]Cl (3) demonstrated distinct behavior. Upon hydrolysis, an equilibrium (Keq = 0.385 mM) between the complexes [Pt(en)(2-phpy)Cl]+ and [Pt(en)(2-phpy-H+)]+ was observed with no evidence (NMR or HR-ESI-MS) for the presence of the aquated complex [Pt(en)(2-phpy)(H2O)]2+. Despite the kinetic similarities between phenanthriplatin and (2), complexes (1) and (2) exhibit minimal activity against A549 lung cancer cell line (IC50 > 100 μΜ), whereas complex (3) exhibits notable cytotoxicity (IC50 = 41.11 ± 2.1 μΜ). In examining the DNA binding of (1) and (2) to the DNA model guanosine (guo), we validated their binding through guoN7, which led to an increased population of the C3'-endo sugar conformation, as expected. However, we observed that the rapid transition 2E (C2'-endo) ↔ 3E (C3'-endo), in the case of [Pt(en)(py)(guo)](NO3)2 ([1-guo]), slows down in the case of [Pt(en)(2-mepy)(guo)](NO3)2 ([2-guo]), resulting in separate signals for the two conformers in the 1H NMR spectra. This phenomenon arises from the steric hindrance between the methyl group of pyridine and the sugar moiety of guanosine. Notably, this hindrance is absent in [2-(9-MeG)] (9-MeG = 9-methylguanine), probably due to the absence of a bulky sugar unit in 9-MeG. In the case of (3), where the bulkiness of the substitution on the pyridine is further increased by a phenyl group, we observed a notable proximity between 9-MeGH8 and the phenyl ring of 2-phpy. Considering that only (3) exhibited good cytotoxicity against the A549 cancer cell line, it is suggested that auxiliary ligands, L, with an extended aromatic system and proper orientation in complexes of the type cis-[Pt(en)(L)Cl]NO3, may enhance the cytotoxic activity of such complexes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ijms25126526
A549 DNA-binding NMR Pt anticancer pyridine synthesis
Tayler D. Prieto Otoya, Kane T. McQuaid, Christine J. Cardin ¡ 2024 ¡ Medicinal Chemistry Research ¡ Springer ¡ added 2026-04-20
AbstractG-quadruplex DNA secondary structures are formed in guanine-rich sequences and have been found to play an important role in regulating different biological processes. Indeed, guanine-rich sequ Show more
AbstractG-quadruplex DNA secondary structures are formed in guanine-rich sequences and have been found to play an important role in regulating different biological processes. Indeed, guanine-rich sequences with the potential to form G-quadruplexes are present in different regions in the human genome, such as telomeres and the promoter region of different genes, including oncogene promoters. Thus, the rational design of small molecules capable of interacting, stabilising or damaging with high specificity these secondary structures represents an important strategy for the development of potent anticancer drugs. In this review, we highlight the interaction between G-quadruplex structures and their ligands, specifically emphasising the role of metal complexes. We provide detailed structural insight into the binding modes of metal complex-G-quadruplex interaction by analysing 18 sets of coordinates from X-ray and NMR currently available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB), with a primary focus on X-ray structural data. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00044-024-03309-w
NMR X-ray amino-acid anticancer coordination-chemistry review
Carneiro TJ, Batista de Carvalho ALM, Vojtek M +4 more ¡ 2024 ¡ Journal of Medicinal Chemistry ¡ ACS Publications ¡ added 2026-04-20
Cisplatin (cDDP) resistance is a matter of concern in triple-negative breast cancer therapeutics. We measured the metabolic response of cDDP-sensitive (S) and -resistant (R) MDA-MB-231 cells to Pd2Spe Show more
Cisplatin (cDDP) resistance is a matter of concern in triple-negative breast cancer therapeutics. We measured the metabolic response of cDDP-sensitive (S) and -resistant (R) MDA-MB-231 cells to Pd2Spermine(Spm) (a possible alternative to cDDP) compared to cDDP to investigate (i) intrinsic response/resistance mechanisms and (ii) the potential cytotoxic role of Pd2Spm. Cell extracts were analyzed by untargeted nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics, and cell media were analyzed for particular metabolites. CDDP-exposed S cells experienced enhanced antioxidant protection and small deviations in the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA), pyrimidine metabolism, and lipid oxidation (proposed cytotoxicity signature). R cells responded more strongly to cDDP, suggesting a resistance signature of activated TCA cycle, altered AMP/ADP/ATP and adenine/uracil fingerprints, and phospholipid biosynthesis (without significant antioxidant protection). Pd2Spm impacted more markedly on R/S cell metabolisms, inducing similarities to cDDP/S cells (probably reflecting high cytotoxicity) and strong additional effects indicative of amino acid depletion, membrane degradation, energy/nucleotide adaptations, and a possible beneficial intracellular γ-aminobutyrate/glutathione-mediated antioxidant mechanism. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c00435
NMR amino-acid anticancer
Hyoung Soon Kwon, Geon Hyeong Park, Huiyeong Ju +2 more ¡ 2024 ¡ New Journal of Chemistry ¡ Royal Society of Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
Mono or bis(tetrazole–thiolato) Pd(II) or Pt(II) complexes were obtained from the reactions of dialkyl Pd(II) or Pt(II) complexes with organic tetrazole–thiones (1-aryl- or 1-alkyl-1H-tetrazol Show more
Mono or bis(tetrazole–thiolato) Pd(II) or Pt(II) complexes were obtained from the reactions of dialkyl Pd(II) or Pt(II) complexes with organic tetrazole–thiones (1-aryl- or 1-alkyl-1H-tetrazole-5-thiones) via deprotonation. In contrast, equimolar reactions of zerovalent Pt(0) or Pd(0) complexes with organic tetrazole–thiones afforded hydrido or bis(tetrazole–thiolato) Pt(II) and Pd(II) complexes, and cyclometallated Pt(II) or Pd(II) complexes bearing a tetrazole–thiolato moiety via oxidative addition, depending on the organic substituents on the tetrazole–thiones. In particular, variable (time and temperature)-dependent 1H-NMR spectra of the hydrido Pt(II) tetrazole–thiolates reveal an upfield shift of the hydride signal, suggesting N,S-coordination behavior of the tetrazole–thiolato ligand. Additionally, the N-CH2 signal corresponds to the six-membered ring of platinacycle or palladacycle exhibiting geminal coupling with multiple protons and PR3 ligands; these coupling values were further determined using 1H{31P} experiments. Finally, treatment of the alkyl Pd(II) tetrazole–thiolate or Pd(II) bis(tetrazole–thiolates) with organic tert-butyl isocyanide, thiophenol, and organic halides caused the selective insertion of the isocyanide into the Pd–C bond or deprotonation to afford a Pd(II) disulfide complex and substitution to afford new organic tetrazolyl sulfides. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D4NJ01429D
NMR Pd Pt coordination-chemistry tetrazole thiolate
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
Victoria V. L. Mßller, Peter V. Simpson, Kun Peng +7 more ¡ 2023 ¡ Inorganic Chemistry ¡ ACS Publications ¡ added 2026-04-20
The biological activity of Pd(II) and Pt(II) complexes toward three different cancer cell lines as well as inhibition of selenoenzyme thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) was modulated in an unexpected way by Show more
The biological activity of Pd(II) and Pt(II) complexes toward three different cancer cell lines as well as inhibition of selenoenzyme thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) was modulated in an unexpected way by the introduction of triazolate as a "protective group" to the inner metal coordination sphere using the iClick reaction of [M(N3)(terpy)]PF6 [M = Pd(II) or Pt(II) and terpy = 2,2':6',2″-terpyridine] with an electron-poor alkyne. In a cell proliferation assay using A549, HT-29, and MDA-MB-231 human cancer cell lines, the palladium compound was significantly more potent than the isostructural platinum analogue and exhibited submicromolar activity on the most responsive cell line. This difference was also reflected in the inhibitory efficiency toward TrxR with IC50 values of 0.1 versus 5.4 μM for the Pd(II) and Pt(II) complexes, respectively. UV/Vis kinetic studies revealed that the Pt compound binds to selenocysteine faster than to cysteine [k = (22.9 ± 0.2)·10-3 vs (7.1 ± 0.2)·10-3 s-1]. Selective triazolato ligand exchange of the title compounds with cysteine (Hcys) and selenocysteine (Hsec)─but not histidine (His) and 9-ethylguanine (9EtG)─was confirmed by 1H, 77Se, and 195Pt NMR spectroscopy. Crystal structures of three of the four ligand exchange products were obtained, including [Pt(sec)(terpy)]PF6 as the first metal complex of selenocysteine to be structurally characterized. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c02701
NMR Pd Pt X-ray
Leonardo Querci, Deborah Grifagni, Inês B Trindade +4 more ¡ 2023 ¡ Journal of Biomolecular NMR ¡ Springer ¡ added 2026-04-20
The robustness of NMR coherence transfer in proximity of a paramagnetic center depends on the relaxation properties of the nuclei involved. In the case of Iron-Sulfur Proteins, different pulse schemes Show more
The robustness of NMR coherence transfer in proximity of a paramagnetic center depends on the relaxation properties of the nuclei involved. In the case of Iron-Sulfur Proteins, different pulse schemes or different parameter sets often provide complementary results. Tailored versions of HCACO and CACO experiments significantly increase the number of observed CÎą/C' connectivities in highly paramagnetic systems, by recovering many resonances that were lost due to paramagnetic relaxation. Optimized 13C direct detected experiments can significantly extend the available assignments, improving the overall knowledge of these systems. The different relaxation properties of CÎą and C' nuclei are exploited in CACO vs COCA experiments and the complementarity of the two experiments is used to obtain structural information. The two [Fe2S2]+ clusters containing NEET protein CISD3 and the one [Fe4S4]2+ cluster containing HiPIP protein PioC have been taken as model systems. We show that tailored experiments contribute to decrease the blind sphere around the cluster, to extend resonance assignment of cluster bound cysteine residues and to retrieve details on the topology of the iron-bound ligand residues. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s10858-023-00425-4
Fe NMR amino-acid
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 (2,2′-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 (2,2′-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 2,2′-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
Yulia P. Tupolova, Leonid D. Popov, Valery G. Vlasenko +9 more ¡ 2023 ¡ New Journal of Chemistry ¡ Royal Society of Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
Based on bis-hetarylhydrazone H2L, a condensation product of 2,6-diacetylpyridine with 2-hydrazinobenzoxazole, a series of mononuclear copper(II) coordination compounds have been synthesized: Show more
Based on bis-hetarylhydrazone H2L, a condensation product of 2,6-diacetylpyridine with 2-hydrazinobenzoxazole, a series of mononuclear copper(II) coordination compounds have been synthesized: [Cu(HL)NO3], [Cu(HL)(H2O)]ClO4, [Cu(HL)X] (X = Br−, X = Cl−). The structure of the compounds has been studied by means of NMR, IR, ESR, X-ray absorption spectroscopy and X-ray single crystal diffraction methods. In the compounds the copper center is in the square pyramidal environment. All compounds have been screened in vitro for their cytotoxic activity against HepG2 and MRC-5 cell lines. The ligand H2L shows no cytotoxicity at tested concentrations (1–100 μM), while all the Cu(II) complexes exhibit significant dose-dependent cytotoxic effects with IC50 values in the range of 1.4–3.0 μM (HepG2 cells). Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D3NJ02445H
Cu HepG2 Ir NMR X-ray anticancer coordination-chemistry synthesis
E. A. Ermakova, Ermakova, E. A., Yu. A. Golubeva +9 more ¡ 2023 ¡ Pleiades Publishing ¡ added 2026-04-20
Abstract The complex [Zn(Phen)(H2O)L2] (I), where HL is 5-benzyltetrazole, Phen is 1,10-phenanthroline, was synthesized. The compound was characterized by standard physicochemical methods (elemental a Show more
Abstract The complex [Zn(Phen)(H2O)L2] (I), where HL is 5-benzyltetrazole, Phen is 1,10-phenanthroline, was synthesized. The compound was characterized by standard physicochemical methods (elemental analysis, powder X-ray diffraction, IR spectroscopy). According to X-ray diffraction data (CCDC no. 2220597), zinc coordination environment in the crystal structure of I corresponds to a distorted trigonal bipyramid. The ligand HL is monodentate and is coordinated via tetrazolate ring nitrogen. The stability of complex I was studied by NMR spectroscopy in DMSO. The cytotoxic properties of the compound were assessed against HepG-2 (hepatocellular carcinoma) and MRC-5 (noncancerous human fibroblasts) cells. Complex I exhibits weak cytotoxic properties in the studied concentration range (1–100 µM). Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1134/S1070328423600158
Ir NMR X-ray Zn anticancer coordination-chemistry pyridine synthesis
K.M. Okuda, L.S. Churchman, R.D. Chapman +252 more ¡ 2022 ¡ Nucleic acids research ¡ Oxford University Press ¡ added 2026-04-20
K.M. Okuda, L.S. Churchman, R.D. Chapman, M. Heidemann, C. Hintermair, D. Eick, E. Compe, J.M. Egly, P. Di Lello, L.M. Miller Jenkins, C. Mas, C. Langlois, E. Malitskaya, A. Fradet-Turcotte, J. Archambault, P. Legault, J.G. Omichinski, M. Okuda, A. Tanaka, M. Satoh, S. Mizuta, M. Takazawa, Y. Ohkuma, Y. Nishimura, L.M. Jenkins, T.N. Jones, B.D. Nguyen, T. Hara, H. Yamaguchi, J.D. Dikeakos, E. Appella, M. Lussier-Price, S. Soni, T. Morse, G. Arseneault, J. Lafrance-Vanasse, J.J. Bieker, K. Araki, K. Ohtani, K. Potempa, M.S. Kobor, P.R. Chabot, L. Raiola, L. Cappadocia, M. Kinoshita, E. Kakumu, K. Sugasawa, Y. Nakazawa, C. Guo, T. Ogi, V. Gervais, V. Lamour, A. Jawhari, F. Frindel, E. Wasielewski, S. Dubaele, J.C. Thierry, B. Kieffer, A. Poterszman, H.T. Chen, Y. He, C. Yan, J. Fang, C. Inouye, R. Tjian, I. Ivanov, E. Nogales, B.J. Greber, T.H.D. Nguyen, P.V. Afonine, P.D. Adams, D.B. Toso, J. Cavanagh, W.J. Fairbroher, A.G., III Palmer, N.J. Skelton, F. Delaglio, S. Grzesiek, G.W. Vuister, G. Zhu, J. Pfeifer, A. Bax, B.A. Johnson, R.A. Blevins, G. Cornilescu, A.T. Brßnger, C.D. Schwieters, J.J. Kuszewski, N. Tjandra, G.M. Clore, J.P. Linge, M.A. Williams, C.A. Spronk, A.M. Bonvin, M. Nilges, R.A. Laskowski, J.A.C. Rullmann, M.W. MacArthur, R. Kaptein, J.M. Thornton, R. Koradi, M. Billeter, K. Wßthrich, T. Ekimoto, J. Kurita, M. Ikeguchi, S. Yamashita, A.R. Lehmann, C. McQuin, A. Goodman, V. Chernyshev, L. Kamentsky, B.A. Cimini, K.W. Karhohs, M. Doan, L. Ding, S.M. Rafelski, D. Thirstrup, P. Cramer, D.A. Bushnell, J. Fu, A.L. Gnatt, B. Maier-Davis, N.E. Thompson, R.R. Burgess, A.M. Edwards, P.R. David, R.D. Kornberg, F. del Río-Portilla, A. Gaskell, D. Gilbert, J.A. Ladias, G. Wagner, K. Kayukawa, Y. Makino, S. Yogosawa, T. Tamura, G.L. Christensen, C.D. Kelstrup, C. Lyngsø, U. Sarwar, R. Bøgebo, S.P. Sheikh, S. Gammeltoft, J.V. Olsen, J.L. Hansen, T. Dodd, J.A. Tainer, S.E. Tsutakawa, S.M. Vos, L. Farnung, M. Boehning, C. Wigge, A. Linden, H. Urlaub, E. Evans, J. Fellows, A. Coffer, R.D. Wood, A. Tapias, J. Auriol, D. Forget, J.H. Enzlin, O.D. Schärer, F. Coin, B. Coulombe, W.L. de Laat, N.G. Jaspers, J.H. Hoeijmakers, H. Spühr, G. Calero, L. Minakhin, S. Bhagat, A. Brunning, E.A. Campbell, S.A. Darst, R.H. Ebright, K. Severinov, S. Nouraini, J.D. Friesen, D. Xu, S. Nelson, M. Lee, A. Ishiguro, Y. Nogi, K. Hisatake, M. Muramatsu, A. Ishihama, Q. Tan, M.H. Prysak, N.A. Woychik, J.F. Briand, F. Navarro, P. Rematier, C. Boschiero, S. Labarre, M. Werner, G.V. Shpakovski, P. Thuriaux, A.I. Garrido-Godino, M.C. García-López, V. Goler-Baron, M. Selitrennik, O. Barkai, G. Haimovich, R. Lotan, M. Choder, Z.R. Qiu, B. Schwer, S. Shuman, L. Daniel, E. Cerutti, L.M. Donnio, J. Nonnekens, C. Carrat, S. Zahova, P.O. Mari, G. Giglia-Mari, Y. Yang, J. Hu, C.P. Selby, W. Li, A. Yimit, Y. Jiang, A. Sancar, Y. van der Weegen, H. Golan-Berman, T.E.T. Mevissen, K. Apelt, R. Gonzålez-Prieto, J. Goedhart, E.E. Heilbrun, A.C.O. Vertegaal, D. van den Heuvel, J.C. Walter, Y. Hara, Y. Oka, O. Komine, Y. Daigaku, M. Isono, M. Shimada, N. Deger, L.A. Lindsey-Boltz, C. Engel, S. Sainsbury, A.C. Cheung, D. Kostrewa, N.A. Hoffmann, A.J. Jakobi, M. Moreno-Morcillo, S. Glatt, J. Kosinski, W.J.H. Hagen, C. Sachse, C.W. Mßller Show less
Abstract In eukaryotes, three RNA polymerases (RNAPs) play essential roles in the synthesis of various types of RNA: namely, RNAPI for rRNA; RNAPII for mRNA and most snRNAs; and RNAPIII for tRNA and Show more
Abstract In eukaryotes, three RNA polymerases (RNAPs) play essential roles in the synthesis of various types of RNA: namely, RNAPI for rRNA; RNAPII for mRNA and most snRNAs; and RNAPIII for tRNA and other small RNAs. All three RNAPs possess a short flexible tail derived from their common subunit RPB6. However, the function of this shared N-terminal tail (NTT) is not clear. Here we show that NTT interacts with the PH domain (PH-D) of the p62 subunit of the general transcription/repair factor TFIIH, and present the structures of RPB6 unbound and bound to PH-D by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Using available cryo-EM structures, we modelled the activated elongation complex of RNAPII bound to TFIIH. We also provide evidence that the recruitment of TFIIH to transcription sites through the p62–RPB6 interaction is a common mechanism for transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) of RNAPI- and RNAPII-transcribed genes. Moreover, point mutations in the RPB6 NTT cause a significant reduction in transcription of RNAPI-, RNAPII- and RNAPIII-transcribed genes. These and other results show that the p62–RPB6 interaction plays multiple roles in transcription, TC-NER, and cell proliferation, suggesting that TFIIH is engaged in all RNAP systems. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab612
NMR synthesis
Criscuolo A, Napolitano E, Riccardi C +3 more ¡ 2022 ¡ Pharmaceutics ¡ MDPI ¡ added 2026-04-20
G-quadruplexes turned out to be important targets for the development of novel targeted anticancer/antiviral therapies. More than 3000 G-quadruplex small-molecule ligands have been described, with mos Show more
G-quadruplexes turned out to be important targets for the development of novel targeted anticancer/antiviral therapies. More than 3000 G-quadruplex small-molecule ligands have been described, with most of them exerting anticancer/antiviral activity by inducing telomeric damage and/or altering oncogene or viral gene expression in cancer cells and viruses, respectively. For some ligands, in-depth NMR and/or crystallographic studies were performed, providing detailed knowledge on their interactions with diverse G-quadruplex targets. Here, the PDB-deposited NMR and crystal structures of the complexes between telomeric, oncogenic or viral G-quadruplexes and small-molecule ligands, of both organic and metal-organic nature, have been summarized and described based on the G-quadruplex target, from telomeric DNA and RNA G-quadruplexes to DNA oncogenic G-quadruplexes, and finally to RNA viral G-quadruplexes. An overview of the structural details of these complexes is here provided to guide the design of novel ligands targeting more efficiently and selectively cancer- and virus-related G-quadruplex structures. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14112361
NMR X-ray anticancer review
Matt Rammo, Aleksander Trummal, Merle Uudsemaa +9 more · 2022 · Chemistry – A European Journal · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
AbstractLipophilic fluorophores are widely implemented in nonlinear microscopy; however, few existing membrane‐specific probes combine the high brightness of two‐photon excited fluorescence (2PEF) wit Show more
AbstractLipophilic fluorophores are widely implemented in nonlinear microscopy; however, few existing membrane‐specific probes combine the high brightness of two‐photon excited fluorescence (2PEF) with pH sensitivity. Herein we describe four novel two‐photon excited fluorophores, based on a coumarin 151 core structure, where lipophilicity is induced by a covalently attached phosphazene moiety. Changing the environmental acidity using trifluoromethanesulfonic (triflic) acid leads to profound changes in the linear fluorescence and 2PEF characteristics, due to chromophores’ switching between neutral‐ and protonated forms. We characterize this dependence by measuring the two‐photon absorption (2PA) spectra over the region λ2PA=550–1000 nm, observing 2PA cross sections of σ2PA=10–20 GM, with an associated 2PEF brightness of 10–13 GM, in neutral solutions of both acetonitrile and n‐octanol. Although quantum chemical modelling and NMR measurements show that, at high chromophore concentrations, protonation may be accompanied by a dimerization process, these dimers likely do not form at the lower concentrations used in optical spectroscopy. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/chem.202103707
NMR imaging
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
Batyrenko, A. A., A. A. Batyrenko, Mikolaichuk, O. V. +17 more ¡ 2021 ¡ Pleiades Publishing ¡ added 2026-04-20
Abstract A series of palladium(II) complexes with 1H- and 2H-tetrazole ligands (2-isopropyl-5-R-2H-tetrazoles and 1H-tetrazol-1-ylcarboxylic acids) was synthesized. Structure of the obtained compounds Show more
Abstract A series of palladium(II) complexes with 1H- and 2H-tetrazole ligands (2-isopropyl-5-R-2H-tetrazoles and 1H-tetrazol-1-ylcarboxylic acids) was synthesized. Structure of the obtained compounds was confirmed by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, high-resolution mass spectrometry, and single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. According to the spectrophotometry data, the complexes are weakly bound to DNA. The cytotoxic activity of the obtained palladium complexes was studied in vitro. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1134/S1070363221040149
NMR Pd X-ray anticancer synthesis tetrazole
V. P. Boyarskii, Boyarskii, V. P., A. S. Mikherdov +9 more ¡ 2021 ¡ Springer US ¡ Springer ¡ added 2026-04-20
A new diaminocarbene cis-palladium(II) complex containing a 2-aminobenzoxazole ligand was synthesized by reacting cis-[PdCl2(CNCy)2] and 2-aminobenzoxazole. The structure and composition of the obtain Show more
A new diaminocarbene cis-palladium(II) complex containing a 2-aminobenzoxazole ligand was synthesized by reacting cis-[PdCl2(CNCy)2] and 2-aminobenzoxazole. The structure and composition of the obtained complex were proven by NMR spectroscopy and high-resolution mass spectrometry. The cytotoxicities of the obtained complex and structurally similar palladium(II) complexes containing a 2-aminothiazole ligand were tested against human cancer cells of various histogenesis (MCF-7, HL60, HeLa, DLD1, A431). The activities of several complexes against cancer cells were higher than those of the reference drug cisplatin and the free ligands, i.e., 2-aminooxazole and substituted 2-aminothiazoles. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11094-021-02393-1
HeLa MCF-7 NMR Pd anticancer synthesis
Artur Krężel, Wolfgang Maret · 2021 · Chemical Reviews · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
The functions, purposes, and roles of metallothioneins have been the subject of speculations since the discovery of the protein over 60 years ago. This article guides through the history of investigat Show more
The functions, purposes, and roles of metallothioneins have been the subject of speculations since the discovery of the protein over 60 years ago. This article guides through the history of investigations and resolves multiple contentions by providing new interpretations of the structure-stability-function relationship. It challenges the dogma that the biologically relevant structure of the mammalian proteins is only the one determined by X-ray diffraction and NMR spectroscopy. The terms metallothionein and thionein are ambiguous and insufficient to understand biological function. The proteins need to be seen in their biological context, which limits and defines the chemistry possible. They exist in multiple forms with different degrees of metalation and types of metal ions. The homoleptic thiolate coordination of mammalian metallothioneins is important for their molecular mechanism. It endows the proteins with redox activity and a specific pH dependence of their metal affinities. The proteins, therefore, also exist in different redox states of the sulfur donor ligands. Their coordination dynamics allows a vast conformational landscape for interactions with other proteins and ligands. Many fundamental signal transduction pathways regulate the expression of the dozen of human metallothionein genes. Recent advances in understanding the control of cellular zinc and copper homeostasis are the foundation for suggesting that mammalian metallothioneins provide a highly dynamic, regulated, and uniquely biological metal buffer to control the availability, fluctuations, and signaling transients of the most competitive Zn(II) and Cu(I) ions in cellular space and time. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.1c00371
Cu NMR X-ray Zn amino-acid thiolate
Carneiro TJ, Araújo R, Vojtek M +5 more ¡ 2021 ¡ Metabolites ¡ MDPI ¡ added 2026-04-20
Pd(II)-compounds are presently regarded as promising anticancer drugs, as an alternative to Pt(II)-based drugs (e.g., cisplatin), which typically trigger severe side-effects and acquired resistance. D Show more
Pd(II)-compounds are presently regarded as promising anticancer drugs, as an alternative to Pt(II)-based drugs (e.g., cisplatin), which typically trigger severe side-effects and acquired resistance. Dinuclear Pd(II) complexes with biogenic polyamines such as spermine (Pd2Spm) have exhibited particularly beneficial cytotoxic properties, hence unveiling the importance of understanding their impact on organism metabolism. The present study reports the first nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-based metabolomics study to assess the in vivo impact of Pd2Spm on the metabolism of healthy mice, to identify metabolic markers with possible relation to biotoxicity/side-effects and their dynamics. The changes in the metabolic profiles of both aqueous and lipophilic extracts of mice kidney, liver, and breast tissues were evaluated, as a function of drug-exposure time, using cisplatin as a reference drug. A putative interpretation was advanced for the metabolic deviations specifically triggered by Pd2Spm, this compound generally inducing faster metabolic response and recovery to control levels for all organs tested, compared to cisplatin (except for kidney lipid metabolism). These results constitute encouraging preliminary metabolic data suggestive of potential lower negative effects of Pd2Spm administration. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/metabo11020114
NMR Pd Pt anticancer
Jordan SF, Ioannou I, Rammu H +7 more ¡ 2021 ¡ Nature communications ¡ Nature ¡ added 2026-04-20
Iron-sulfur (FeS) proteins are ancient and fundamental to life, being involved in electron transfer and CO2 fixation. FeS clusters have structures similar to the unit-cell of FeS minerals such as grei Show more
Iron-sulfur (FeS) proteins are ancient and fundamental to life, being involved in electron transfer and CO2 fixation. FeS clusters have structures similar to the unit-cell of FeS minerals such as greigite, found in hydrothermal systems linked with the origin of life. However, the prebiotic pathway from mineral surfaces to biological clusters is unknown. Here we show that FeS clusters form spontaneously through interactions of inorganic Fe2+/Fe3+ and S2- with micromolar concentrations of the amino acid cysteine in water at alkaline pH. Bicarbonate ions stabilize the clusters and even promote cluster formation alone at concentrations >10 mM, probably through salting-out effects. We demonstrate robust, concentration-dependent formation of [4Fe4S], [2Fe2S] and mononuclear iron clusters using UV-Vis spectroscopy, 57Fe-Mössbauer spectroscopy and 1H-NMR. Cyclic voltammetry shows that the clusters are redox-active. Our findings reveal that the structures responsible for biological electron transfer and CO2 reduction could have formed spontaneously from monomers at the origin of life. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26158-2
Fe NMR amino-acid
Ocansey, Edward , Darkwa, James , Makhubela, Banothile C. E. ¡ 2020 ¡ Frontiers ¡ Frontiers ¡ added 2026-04-20
A rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, following years of burning fossil fuels, has brought about increase in global temperatures and climate change due to the green-house effect. As such, recen Show more
A rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, following years of burning fossil fuels, has brought about increase in global temperatures and climate change due to the green-house effect. As such, recent efforts aimed at addressing this problem have been directed to the use of carbon dioxide as an inexpensive and non-toxic single carbon source for making chemical products. Herein, we report the use of tetrazolyl complexes as catalysts precursors for hydrogenation of carbon dioxide. Specifically, tetrazolyl compounds bearing phosphorus-sulfur bonds have been synthesized with the view of using these as phosphorus-nitrogen bidentate tetrazolyl ligands that can coordinate to iridium(III) thereby forming heteroatomic five-member complexes. Interestingly, reacting the phosphorus-nitrogen bidentate tetrazolyl ligands with iridium dimer led to serendipitous isolation of chiral-at-metal iridium(III) half-sandwich complexes instead. The complexes were obtained via prior formation non-chiral iridium half-sandwich complexes. The complexes undergo initial phosphorus-sulfur bond heterolysis of the precursor ligands, which then ultimately results in new half-sandwich iridium complexes featuring monodentate phosphine co-ligands with proton responsive functionalities. Conditions necessary to significantly affect the rate of phosphorus-sulfur bond heterolysis in the precursor ligand and the subsequent coordination to iridium have been reported. The complexes served as catalyst precursors and exhibited activity in carbon dioxide and bicarbonate hydrogenation in excellent catalytic activity, at low catalyst loadings, producing concentrated formate solutions exclusively. Catalyst precursors with proton responsive phosphines were found to influence catalytic activity when present as racemates, while ease of dissociation of the ligand from the iridium centre was observed to influence activity in spite of the presence of electron-donating ligands. A test for homogeneity indicated that hydrogenation of carbon dioxide proceeded by homogenous means. Subsequently, the mechanism of the reaction by the iridium catalyst precursors was studied using proton NMR techniques. This revealed that a chiral-at-metal iridium hydride species generated in situ, served as the active catalyst. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2020.591353
Co Ir NMR catalysis coordination-chemistry phosphine synthesis tetrazole
Nicola Monti, Stefano Zacchini, Massimiliano Massi +5 more ¡ 2020 ¡ Applied Organometallic Chemistry ¡ Wiley ¡ added 2026-04-20
Herein, we describe a new family of tris chelate homoleptic Ru (II) complexes, [Ru(N^N)3]2+, where the role of the diimine‐type ligands (N^N) was fulfilled by 2‐pyridyl (PTZ) or 2‐quinolyl tetrazole ( Show more
Herein, we describe a new family of tris chelate homoleptic Ru (II) complexes, [Ru(N^N)3]2+, where the role of the diimine‐type ligands (N^N) was fulfilled by 2‐pyridyl (PTZ) or 2‐quinolyl tetrazole (QTZ) derivatives decorated with various alkyl substituents at the N‐2 position of the tetrazole ring. The new Ru (II) complexes with general formula [Ru (PTZ‐R)3]2+ and [Ru (QTZ‐R)3]2+, were obtained as mixtures of facial (fac) and meridional (mer) isomers, as suggested by NMR (1H, 13C) experiments, and confirmed in the case of mer‐[Ru (QTZ‐Me)3]2+, by X‐ray crystallography. The photophysical behavior of the tetrazole‐based [Ru(N^N)3]2+ type species was investigated by UV–vis absorption spectroscopy, providing trends typical of polypyridyl Ru (II) complexes. The new homoleptic complexes fac/mer‐[Ru (PTZ‐R)3]2+ and fac/mer‐[Ru (QTZ‐R)3]2+ have been assessed for any eventual antimicrobial activity towards two different bacteria such as Gram‐negative Escherichia coli and Gram‐positive Deinococcus radiodurans. Whereas being inactive toward E. coli, the response of agar disks diffusion tests suggested that some of the new fac/mer Ru (II) complexes could inhibit the growth of D. radiodurans. This effect was further investigated by determining the growth kinetics in liquid medium of D. radiodurans exposed to the fac/mer‐[Ru (PTZ‐R)3]2+ and fac/mer‐[Ru (QTZ‐R)3]2+ complexes at different concentrations. The outcome of these experiments highlighted that the turn‐on of the growth inhibitory effect took place as the linear hexyl chain was appended to the PTZ or QTZ scaffold, suggesting also how the inhibitory activity appeared more pronouncedly exerted by the facial isomers fac‐[Ru (PTZ‐Hex)3]2+ and fac‐[Ru (QTZ‐Hex)3]2+ (MIC = ca. 3.0 μg/ml) with respect to the corresponding meridional isomers (MIC = ca. 6.0 μg/ml). Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/aoc.5806
NMR Ru X-ray antibacterial coordination-chemistry tetrazole
Tatiyana V. Serebryanskaya, Mikhail A. Kinzhalov, Vladimir Bakulev +13 more ¡ 2020 ¡ New Journal of Chemistry ¡ Royal Society of Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
Bis-ADC complexes cis-[Pd{C(NHC6H4NH2)N(H)R}2]Cl2 (R = Xyl 4a, Cy 4b, C6H4-4-F 4c) and cis-[Pt{C(NHC6H4NH2)N(H)R}2]Cl2 (R = Xyl 5a, Cy 5b, C6H4-4-F 5c) were synthesized via the metal-mediated Show more
Bis-ADC complexes cis-[Pd{C(NHC6H4NH2)N(H)R}2]Cl2 (R = Xyl 4a, Cy 4b, C6H4-4-F 4c) and cis-[Pt{C(NHC6H4NH2)N(H)R}2]Cl2 (R = Xyl 5a, Cy 5b, C6H4-4-F 5c) were synthesized via the metal-mediated coupling of two isocyanide ligands in cis-[MCl2(CNR)2] (M = Pd, Pt; R = Xyl, Cy, C6H4-4-F) and 1,2-diaminobenzene. New compounds 4c and 5a–c were characterized by HR ESI+-MS, IR, and 1H, 13C{1H} and 195Pt{1H} NMR spectroscopy; the structures of 4a and 5a were elucidated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The stability of the ADC complexes in aqueous media (5 mM NaCl) was monitored by UV absorption spectroscopy, HR ESI+ mass spectrometry, and 195Pt{1H} NMR spectroscopy (for 5a). Molar conductivity measurements in MeOH (ΛM = 167–173 Ω−1 mol−1 cm2) indicate that, in this solvent, the ADC complexes exist as dicationic species of [A][Q]2 type. The ADC complexes binding to CT DNA was investigated by means of spectroscopic and hydrodynamic techniques including UV absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, low-gradient viscometry, flow birefringence, and AFM imaging. As a result, complexes 4a and 5a were shown to bind double-stranded DNA predominantly via the formation of monofunctional adducts in the major groove of the macromolecule. Binding of the ADC complexes also provokes the formation of a large number of intermolecular DNA–DNA contacts in solution. The antiproliferative activity of all prepared ADC complexes 4a–c and 5a–c was evaluated in vitro against three human carcinoma cell lines (HT-29, MDA-MB-231, and MCF-7) and two non-tumorigenic cell lines (L929 and RC-124) and compared to that of cisplatin. Among the compounds studied, complexes 4a and 5a appeared to be the most active species with IC50 values in MCF-7 cells of about 10 μM. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D0NJ00060D
DNA-binding Ir MCF-7 NMR Pd Pt X-ray anticancer
2019 ¡ Journal of the Belarusian State University. Chemistry ¡ added 2026-04-20
It has been shown that the WP04 functional in combination with moderate basic sets 6-31G(d) and SDD allows to calculate characteristics of 1H NMR-spectrum of metal complexes with ligands based Show more
It has been shown that the WP04 functional in combination with moderate basic sets 6-31G(d) and SDD allows to calculate characteristics of 1H NMR-spectrum of metal complexes with ligands based on tetrazole derivatives with high accuracy, which can be used to assign signals in the NMR-spectra. The process of hydrolysis of the isomeric platinum(II) chloride complexes with (2-isopropyltetrazol-5-yl)acetic acid has been investigated using the methods of quantum chemistry and NMR-spectroscopy. An explanation of the changes of signals in the 1H NMR-spectra of the considered complexes during their hydrolysis is given. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.33581/2520-257x-2019-2-3-11
NMR Pt
Zahraa M. Abdnoor, Ammar J. Alabdali ¡ 2019 ¡ Journal of the Chinese Chemical Society ¡ Wiley ¡ added 2026-04-20
Four new complexes of Au(III), Pd(II), Ni(II), and Cu(II) ions were synthesized, derived from a novel heterocyclic ligand (L) that has both triazole and tetrazole rings. The ligand synthesis was throu Show more
Four new complexes of Au(III), Pd(II), Ni(II), and Cu(II) ions were synthesized, derived from a novel heterocyclic ligand (L) that has both triazole and tetrazole rings. The ligand synthesis was through successive steps to achieve both heterocyclic rings. The synthesized compounds were characterized using conventional techniques like infrared, ultra violet—visible and proton/carbon nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, metal and thermal analyses, and molar conductivity. All complexes were suggested to have square planar geometry, gold, nickel, and palladium complexes were salts while copper neutral complexes have the chemical formulas; [AuL2]Cl.2H2O, [PdL2]Cl2.2H2O, [NiL2]Cl2.2H2O, and [CuL2]. The cytotoxic effect was studied on breast cancer cell line (MCF‐7 cell line) at different concentrations by using the 3‐(4,5‐dimethylthiazol‐2‐yl)‐2,5‐diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay method, for the ligand (L) and complexes. The results showed that gold(III) and nickel(II) complexes have the highest cytotoxicity among all compounds against cancer cell lines. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/jccs.201900010
Au Cu MCF-7 NMR Ni Pd anticancer synthesis