2. Universidad Cardenal Herrera-CEU

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    UCH
    Impact of the zinc complexation of polytopic polyaza ligands on the interaction with double and single stranded DNA/RNA and antimicrobial activity2023-03-27

    Metal complexes have gained a huge interest in the biomedical research in the last decade because of the access to unexplored chemical space with regards to organic molecules and to present additional functionalities to act simultaneously as diagnostic and therapeutic agents. Herein, we evaluated the interaction of two polytopic polyaza ligands and their zinc complexes with DNA and RNA by UV thermal denaturation, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopic assays. The zinc coordination was investigated by X-ray diffraction and afforded the structure of the binuclear zinc complex of PYPOD. Thermal denaturation of DNA and RNA and fluorimetry analysis revealed preferential binding of the zinc-PHENPOD complexes towards GC-containing DNA in contrast to the free ligands. On the other hand, PYPOD metal complexes, compared to the free ligand, stabilized AT-based DNA (B-form) better than AU-RNA (A-form). With regards to single stranded RNA, the binuclear complex of PHENPOD and the free ligand can efficiently identify polyadenylic acid (poly A) among other RNA sequences by circular dichroism spectroscopy. The antimicrobial activity in S. aureus and E. coli bacteria showed the highest activity for the free ligands and their trinuclear zinc complexes. This work can provide valuable insights into the impact of the nuclearity of polytopic polyaza ligands in the binding to DNA/RNA and the antimicrobial effect.

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    UCH
    Donor radii in rare-earth complexes2023-10-02

    We present a set of donor radii for the rare-earth cations obtained from the analysis of structural data available in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD). Theoretical calculations using density functional theory (DFT) and wave function approaches (NEVPT2) demonstrate that the Ln-donor distances can be broken down into contributions of the cation and the donor atom, with the minimum in electron density (ρ) that defines the position of (3,–1) critical points corresponding well with Shannon’s crystal radii (CR). Subsequent linear fits of the experimental bond distances for all rare earth cations (except Pm3+) afforded donor radii (rD) that allow for the prediction of Ln-donor distances regardless of the nature of the rare-earth cation and its oxidation state. This set of donor radii can be used to rationalize structural data and identify particularly weak or strong interactions, which has important implications in the understanding of the stability and reactivity of complexes of these metal ions. A few cases of incorrect atom assignments in X-ray structures were also identified using the derived rD values.