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From Preassociation to Chelation: A Survey of Cisplatin Interaction with Methionine at Molecular Level by IR Ion Spectroscopy and Computations

[Image: see text] Methionine (Met) plays an important role in the metabolism of cisplatin anticancer drug. Yet, methionine platination in aqueous solution presents a highly complex pattern of interconnected paths and intermediates. This study reports on the reaction of methionine with the active aqu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Paciotti, Roberto, Corinti, Davide, Maitre, Philippe, Coletti, Cecilia, Re, Nazzareno, Chiavarino, Barbara, Crestoni, Maria Elisa, Fornarini, Simonetta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8397306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34236851
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jasms.1c00152
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Methionine (Met) plays an important role in the metabolism of cisplatin anticancer drug. Yet, methionine platination in aqueous solution presents a highly complex pattern of interconnected paths and intermediates. This study reports on the reaction of methionine with the active aqua form of cisplatin, cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+), isolating the encounter complex of the reactant pair, {cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+)·Met}, by electrospray ionization. In the unsolvated state, charged intermediates are characterized for their structure and photofragmentation behavior by IR ion spectroscopy combined with quantum-chemical calculations, obtaining an outline of the cisplatin–methionine reaction at a molecular level. To summarize the major findings: (i) the {cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+)·Met} encounter complex, lying on the reaction coordinate of the Eigen-Wilkins preassociation mechanism for ligand substitution, is delivered in the gas phase and characterized by IR ion spectroscopy; (ii) upon vibrational excitation, ligand exchange occurs within {cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+)·Met}, releasing water and cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(Met)](+), along the calculated energy profile; (iii) activated cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(Met)](+) ions undergo NH(3) departure, forming a chelate complex, [PtCl(NH(3))(Met)](+), whose structure is congruent with overwhelming S-Met ligation as the primary coordination step. The latter process involving ammonia loss marks a difference with the prevailing chloride replacement in protic solvent, pointing to the effect of a low-polarity environment.