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Selective Lability of Ruthenium(II) Arene Amino Acid Complexes

Scrase, Tom G.; O’Neill, Michael J.; Peel, Andrew J.; Senior, Paul W.; Matthews, Peter D.; Shi, Heyao; Boss, Sally R.; Barker, Paul D.

Authors

Tom G. Scrase

Michael J. O’Neill

Andrew J. Peel

Paul W. Senior

Heyao Shi

Sally R. Boss

Paul D. Barker



Abstract

A series of organometallic complexes of the form [(PhH)Ru(amino acid)]+ have been synthesized using amino acids able to act as tridentate ligands. The straightforward syntheses gave enantiomerically pure complexes with two stereogenic centers due to the enantiopurity of the chelating ligands. Complexes were characterized in the solid-state and/or solution-state where the stability of the complex allowed. The propensity toward labilization of the coordinatively saturated complexes was investigated. The links between complex stability and structural features are very subtle. Nonetheless, H/D exchange rates of coordinated amino groups reveal more significant differences in reactivity linked to metallocycle ring size resulting in decreasing stability of the metallocycle as the amino acid side-chain length increases. The behavior of these systems in acid is unusual, apparently labilizing the carboxylate residue of the amino acid. This acid-catalyzed hemilability in an organometallic is relevant to the use of Ru(II) arenes in medicinal contexts due to the relatively low pH of cancerous cells.

Citation

Scrase, T. G., O’Neill, M. J., Peel, A. J., Senior, P. W., Matthews, P. D., Shi, H., …Barker, P. D. (2015). Selective Lability of Ruthenium(II) Arene Amino Acid Complexes. Inorganic Chemistry, 54(7), 3118-3124. https://doi.org/10.1021/ic502051y

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Mar 23, 2015
Publication Date Apr 6, 2015
Deposit Date May 30, 2023
Journal Inorganic Chemistry
Print ISSN 0020-1669
Electronic ISSN 1520-510X
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 54
Issue 7
Pages 3118-3124
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/ic502051y
Keywords Inorganic Chemistry; Physical and Theoretical Chemistry