Phenylazo-pyridine and Phenylazo-pyrazole Chlorido Ruthenium(II) Arene Complexes: Arene Loss, Aquation, and Cancer Cell Cytotoxicity
- 1 December 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Inorganic Chemistry
- Vol. 45 (26) , 10882-10894
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ic061460h
Abstract
Ru(II) eta6-arene complexes containing p-cymene (p-cym), tetrahydronaphthalene (thn), benzene (bz), or biphenyl (bip), as the arene, phenylazopyridine derivatives (C5H4NN:NC6H5R; R = H (azpy), OH (azpy-OH), NMe2 (azpy-NMe2)) or a phenylazopyrazole derivative (NHC3H2NN:NC6H5NMe2 (azpyz-NMe2)) as N,N-chelating ligands and chloride as a ligand have been synthesized (1-16). The complexes are all intensely colored due to metal-to-ligand charge-transfer Ru 4d6-pi* and intraligand pi -->pi* transitions (eta = 5000-63 700 M-1 cm-1) occurring in the visible region. In the crystal structures of [(eta6-p-cym)Ru(azpy)Cl]PF6 (1), [(eta6-p-cym)Ru(azpy-NMe2)Cl]PF6 (5), and [(eta6-bip)Ru(azpy)Cl]PF6 (4), the relatively long Ru-N(azo) and Ru-(arene-centroid) distances suggest that phenylazopyridine and arene ligands can act as competitive pi-acceptors toward Ru(II) 4d6 electrons. The pKa* values of the pyridine nitrogens of the ligands are low (azpy 2.47, azpy-OH 3.06 and azpy-NMe2 4.60), suggesting that they are weak sigma-donors. This, together with their pi-acceptor behavior, serves to increase the positive charge on ruthenium, and together with the pi-acidic eta6-arene, partially accounts for the slow decomposition of the complexes via hydrolysis and/or arene loss (t(1/2) = 9-21 h for azopyridine complexes, 310 K). The pKa* of the coordinated water in [(eta6-p-cym)Ru(azpyz-NMe2)OH2]2+ (13A) is 4.60, consistent with the increased acidity of the ruthenium center upon coordination to the azo ligand. None of the azpy complexes were cytotoxic toward A2780 human ovarian or A549 human lung cancer cells, but several of the azpy-NMe2, azpy-OH, and azpyz-NMe2 complexes were active (IC50 values 18-88 microM).Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Binding of Organometallic Ruthenium(II) and Osmium(II) Complexes to an Oligonucleotide: A Combined Mass Spectrometric and Theoretical StudyOrganometallics, 2005
- The Synthesis and Characterization of Potassium 2,2‘-BipyridinetetranitroruthenateInorganic Chemistry, 2001
- Kinetic Studies on the Photochemically Activated Solvation of[(.eta.6-arene1)Ru(.eta.6-arene2)]2+ Sandwich CompoundsInorganic Chemistry, 1994
- New Colorimetric Cytotoxicity Assay for Anticancer-Drug ScreeningJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1990
- Triaqua(benzene)ruthenium(II) and triaqua(benzene)osmium(II): synthesis, molecular structure, and water-exchange kineticsInorganic Chemistry, 1988
- High-pressure NMR kinetics. Part 34. Variable-temperature and variable-pressure NMR kinetic study of solvent exchange on hexaaquaruthenium(3+) and -(2+) and hexakis(acetonitrile)ruthenium(2+)Inorganic Chemistry, 1988
- Structure of 1-methyl-2,3,4,5-tetranitropyrrole, a possible high-density explosiveActa Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications, 1986
- Chemistry of bipyridyl-like ligands. 3. Complexes of ruthenium(II) with 2-((4-nitrophenyl)azo)pyridineInorganic Chemistry, 1984
- Chemistry of bipyridyllike ligands. 2. Mixed complexes of ruthenium(II) with 2-(phenylazo)pyridine: a new .pi.-bonding probeInorganic Chemistry, 1982
- Electron-transfer reactions of some derivatives of pentaammine(pyridine)ruthenium(II) and -ruthenium(III)Inorganic Chemistry, 1979