Osmium(ii) tethered half-sandwich complexes: pH-dependent aqueous speciation and transfer hydrogenation in cells |
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Authors: | Sonia Infante-Tadeo,Vanessa Rodrí guez-Fanjul,Abraha Habtemariam,Ana M. Pizarro |
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Affiliation: | IMDEA Nanociencia, Faraday 9, 28049 Madrid Spain.; Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Gibbet Hill Road, Coventry CV4 7AL UK ; Unidad Asociada de Nanobiotecnología CNB-CSIC-IMDEA, 28049 Madrid Spain |
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Abstract: | Aquation is often acknowledged as a necessary step for metallodrug activity inside the cell. Hemilabile ligands can be used for reversible metallodrug activation. We report a new family of osmium(ii) arene complexes of formula [Os(η6-C6H5(CH2)3OH)(XY)Cl]+/0 (1–13) bearing the hemilabile η6-bound arene 3-phenylpropanol, where XY is a neutral N,N or an anionic N,O− bidentate chelating ligand. Os–Cl bond cleavage in water leads to the formation of the hydroxido/aqua adduct, Os–OH(H). In spite of being considered inert, the hydroxido adduct unexpectedly triggers rapid tether ring formation by attachment of the pendant alcohol–oxygen to the osmium centre, resulting in the alkoxy tethered complex [Os(η6-arene-O-κ1)(XY)]n+. Complexes 1C–13C of formula [Os(η6:κ1-C6H5(CH2)3OH/O)(XY)]+ are fully characterised, including the X-ray structure of cation 3C. Tether-ring formation is reversible and pH dependent. Osmium complexes bearing picolinate N,O-chelates (9–12) catalyse the hydrogenation of pyruvate to lactate. Intracellular lactate production upon co-incubation of complex 11 (XY = 4-Me-picolinate) with formate has been quantified inside MDA-MB-231 and MCF7 breast cancer cells. The tether Os–arene complexes presented here can be exploited for the intracellular conversion of metabolites that are essential in the intricate metabolism of the cancer cell.New Os(ii) half-sandwich complexes bearing a pendant alcohol prompt reversible tether-ring formation upon aquation, protecting Os against deactivation. Excitingly, these complexes mediate hydrogenation of pyruvate to lactate inside cancer cells. |
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