4.7 Article

Cucurbit[10]uril binding of dinuclear platinum(II) and ruthenium(II) complexes: association/dissociation rates from seconds to hours

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 39, Issue 8, Pages 2078-2086

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b921172a

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A simpler method for the purification of cucurbit[10]uril (Q[10]) from the Q[10]center dot Q[5] inclusion complex is reported. 1,12-Diaminododecane was used to displace Q[5], as opposed to the synthetic melamine derivative currently used. The binding of trans-[{PtCl(NH3)(2)}(2)(mu-NH2(CH2)(8)NH2)](2+) (CT008) and [{Ru(phen)(2)}(2)(mu-bb(5))](4+) {phen = 1,10-phenanthroline; bb(5) = 1,5-bis[4(4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyridyl)]pentane} (Rubb(5)) to Q[10] was studied by H-1 NMR and luminescence spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry and molecular modelling. The H-1 NMR resonances of the methylene protons in the bridging ligands of CT008 and Rubb(5) exhibited large up field chemical shift changes upon addition of Q[10]. These shifts are indicative of encapsulation of the bridging ligand within the Q[10] cavity, with the metal centres positioned outside the portals. H-1 NMR-based kinetics experiments with Rubb(5) show the presence of a portal-bound intermediate which progresses to a completely encapsulated inclusion complex only after many hours. The large metal centres of Rubb(5) provide a restriction to the movement of the complex in and out of the cavity and result in binding kinetics that are slow on both the H-1 NMR and biological timescales. This result was consistent with molecular modelling simulations. Cyclic voltammetry showed that the Ru(III/II) couple of free Rubb(5) appeared at + 1.058 V (vs Ag/AgCl), with the first ligand reduction observed as a shoulder (approximate to-1.38 V) on the edge of the solvent (water) front. The Q[10]-bound complex exhibited an anodic shift of 48 mV compared to the free metal complex. Luminescence spectroscopy of the binding of Rubb(5) to Q[10] yielded an approximate binding constant of 1.9 x 10(9) M-1. Although CT008 was encapsulated within Q[10], the inclusion complex was not soluble in several buffers at pH 7.0. These results indicate that Q[10] is not an effective delivery vehicle for dinuclear platinum(II) anti-cancer drugs; however, due to the strong binding affinity and slow exchange rates, Q[10] does show considerable promise as a delivery mechanism for controlled slow release of large dinuclear ruthenium(II) complexes.

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