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Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions

The interactions of epinephrine ((R)-(−)-3,4-dihydroxy-α-(methylaminomethyl)benzyl alcohol; Eph(−)) with different toxic cations (methylmercury(II): CH(3)Hg(+); dimethyltin(IV): (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+); dioxouranium(VI): UO(2)(2+)) were studied in NaCl(aq) at different ionic strengths and at T = 298.15 K (...

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Autores principales: Crea, Francesco, De Stefano, Concetta, Irto, Anna, Lando, Gabriele, Materazzi, Stefano, Milea, Demetrio, Pettignano, Alberto, Sammartano, Silvio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7037007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31991662
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25030511
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author Crea, Francesco
De Stefano, Concetta
Irto, Anna
Lando, Gabriele
Materazzi, Stefano
Milea, Demetrio
Pettignano, Alberto
Sammartano, Silvio
author_facet Crea, Francesco
De Stefano, Concetta
Irto, Anna
Lando, Gabriele
Materazzi, Stefano
Milea, Demetrio
Pettignano, Alberto
Sammartano, Silvio
author_sort Crea, Francesco
collection PubMed
description The interactions of epinephrine ((R)-(−)-3,4-dihydroxy-α-(methylaminomethyl)benzyl alcohol; Eph(−)) with different toxic cations (methylmercury(II): CH(3)Hg(+); dimethyltin(IV): (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+); dioxouranium(VI): UO(2)(2+)) were studied in NaCl(aq) at different ionic strengths and at T = 298.15 K (T = 310.15 K for (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+)). The enthalpy changes for the protonation of epinephrine and its complex formation with UO(2)(2+) were also determined using isoperibolic titration calorimetry: ΔH(HL) = −39 ± 1 kJ mol(−1), ΔH(H2L) = −67 ± 1 kJ mol(−1) (overall reaction), ΔH(ML) = −26 ± 4 kJ mol(−1), and ΔH(M2L2(OH)2) = 39 ± 2 kJ mol(−1). The results were that UO(2)(2+) complexation by Eph(−) was an entropy-driven process. The dependence on the ionic strength of protonation and the complex formation constants was modeled using the extended Debye–Hückel, specific ion interaction theory (SIT), and Pitzer approaches. The sequestering ability of adrenaline toward the investigated cations was evaluated using the calculation of pL(0.5) parameters. The sequestering ability trend resulted in the following: UO(2)(2+) >> (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+) > CH(3)Hg(+). For example, at I = 0.15 mol dm(−3) and pH = 7.4 (pH = 9.5 for CH(3)Hg(+)), pL(0.5) = 7.68, 5.64, and 2.40 for UO(2)(2+), (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+), and CH(3)Hg(+), respectively. Here, the pH is with respect to ionic strength in terms of sequestration.
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spelling pubmed-70370072020-03-11 Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions Crea, Francesco De Stefano, Concetta Irto, Anna Lando, Gabriele Materazzi, Stefano Milea, Demetrio Pettignano, Alberto Sammartano, Silvio Molecules Article The interactions of epinephrine ((R)-(−)-3,4-dihydroxy-α-(methylaminomethyl)benzyl alcohol; Eph(−)) with different toxic cations (methylmercury(II): CH(3)Hg(+); dimethyltin(IV): (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+); dioxouranium(VI): UO(2)(2+)) were studied in NaCl(aq) at different ionic strengths and at T = 298.15 K (T = 310.15 K for (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+)). The enthalpy changes for the protonation of epinephrine and its complex formation with UO(2)(2+) were also determined using isoperibolic titration calorimetry: ΔH(HL) = −39 ± 1 kJ mol(−1), ΔH(H2L) = −67 ± 1 kJ mol(−1) (overall reaction), ΔH(ML) = −26 ± 4 kJ mol(−1), and ΔH(M2L2(OH)2) = 39 ± 2 kJ mol(−1). The results were that UO(2)(2+) complexation by Eph(−) was an entropy-driven process. The dependence on the ionic strength of protonation and the complex formation constants was modeled using the extended Debye–Hückel, specific ion interaction theory (SIT), and Pitzer approaches. The sequestering ability of adrenaline toward the investigated cations was evaluated using the calculation of pL(0.5) parameters. The sequestering ability trend resulted in the following: UO(2)(2+) >> (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+) > CH(3)Hg(+). For example, at I = 0.15 mol dm(−3) and pH = 7.4 (pH = 9.5 for CH(3)Hg(+)), pL(0.5) = 7.68, 5.64, and 2.40 for UO(2)(2+), (CH(3))(2)Sn(2+), and CH(3)Hg(+), respectively. Here, the pH is with respect to ionic strength in terms of sequestration. MDPI 2020-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7037007/ /pubmed/31991662 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25030511 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Crea, Francesco
De Stefano, Concetta
Irto, Anna
Lando, Gabriele
Materazzi, Stefano
Milea, Demetrio
Pettignano, Alberto
Sammartano, Silvio
Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title_full Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title_fullStr Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title_short Understanding the Solution Behavior of Epinephrine in the Presence of Toxic Cations: A Thermodynamic Investigation in Different Experimental Conditions
title_sort understanding the solution behavior of epinephrine in the presence of toxic cations: a thermodynamic investigation in different experimental conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7037007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31991662
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25030511
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