4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

100 years of metal coordination chemistry: from Alfred Werner to anticancer metallodrugs

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY
Volume 86, Issue 12, Pages 1897-1910

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/pac-2014-0504

Keywords

Alfred Werner; bioinorganic chemistry; coordination chemistry; IUPAC Congress-44; medicinal chemistry; metal complexes

Funding

  1. Leverhulme Trust [ECF-2013-414]
  2. European Research Council [247450]
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/F034210/1]
  4. EPSRC [EP/F034210/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/F034210/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Alfred Werner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry just over 100 years ago. We recall briefly the era in which he was working, his co-workers, and the equipment he used in his laboratories. His ideas were ground breaking: not only does a metal ion have a primary valency (hauptvalenz, now the oxidation state), but also a secondary valency, the coordination number (nebenvalenz). At that time some refused to accept this idea, but he realised that his new thinking would open up new areas of research. Indeed it did. We illustrate this for the emerging field of medicinal metal coordination chemistry, the design of metal-based therapeutic and diagnostic agents. The biological activity of metal complexes depends intimately not only on the metal and its oxidation state, but also on the type and number of coordinated ligands, and the coordination geometry. This provides a rich platform in pharmacological space for structural and electronic diversity. It is necessary to control both the thermodynamics (strengths of metal-ligand bonds) and kinetics of ligand substitution reactions to provide complexes with defined mechanisms of action. Outer-sphere interactions can also play a major role in target recognition. Our current interest is focussed especially on relatively inert metal complexes which were very familiar to Werner (Ru-II, Os-II, Rh-III, Ir-III, Pt-II, Pt-IV).

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