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Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation
Biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based transition metal(ii) complexes (1–5) were constructed as [M(II)(L) AcO]·nH(2)O {where M = Cu (1) n = 1; Co (2), Mn (3), Ni (4), n = 4 and Zn (5) n = 2}, which were synthesized from 2-(-(2-morpholinoethylimino) methyl)-4-bromophenol ligand (HL) an...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Royal Society of Chemistry
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9064050/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35519345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09218d |
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author | Sakthikumar, Karunganathan Solomon, Rajadurai Vijay Raja, Jeyaraj Dhaveethu |
author_facet | Sakthikumar, Karunganathan Solomon, Rajadurai Vijay Raja, Jeyaraj Dhaveethu |
author_sort | Sakthikumar, Karunganathan |
collection | PubMed |
description | Biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based transition metal(ii) complexes (1–5) were constructed as [M(II)(L) AcO]·nH(2)O {where M = Cu (1) n = 1; Co (2), Mn (3), Ni (4), n = 4 and Zn (5) n = 2}, which were synthesized from 2-(-(2-morpholinoethylimino) methyl)-4-bromophenol ligand (HL) and structurally characterized by various analytical and spectroscopic techniques, which proposed a square planar and tetrahedral geometry around the central metal ion with lattice water molecules. The gel electrophoresis results revealed that complexes 1 and 5 had more potent DNA cleavage efficacy in the presence of an oxidizing agent (H(2)O(2)) as compared to the others. The observed DNA binding results for all the compounds as determined by spectro-electrochemical and hydrodynamic techniques were in the order 3.36 (1) > 3.06 (2) > 2.73 (4) > 2.61 (5) > 1.84 (3) > 1.00 (HL) × 10(4) M(−1). The obtained bovine serum albumin (BSA) protein binding constant (K(b)) results put forward the following order 2.38 (1) > 2.21 (2) > 2.18 (5) > 1.76 (4) > 1.40 (3) > 1.26 (HL) × 10(4) M(−1). Also, the biothermodynamic parameters ([Image: see text] , [Image: see text] , ΔH° and ΔS°) and binding results divulged that all the complexes (1–5) could bind to DNA via intercalation in a spontaneous manner. Density functional theory calculations were employed to optimize the structure of ligand (HL) and its complexes (1–5) to gain insights into their electronic structures. Molecular docking analysis was carried out to identify the preferential binding modes of these complexes toward DNA and BSA protein. The theoretical observations of all cases were found to be very close to the experimental observations. Among the radical scavenging activity results for all the cases toward DPPH, hydroxyl radical, superoxide, nitric oxide and ferric reducing agents, complex (1) revealed a superior scavenging potency over the other compounds. In the screened antimicrobial reports against 10 different selected pathogenic species, although all the complexes (1–5) exhibited a greater significant inhibitory effect than the free ligand, complexes 4 and 5 achieved the best potency over standard drugs. The observed percentage of growth inhibition for all the compounds against the A549, HepG2, MCF-7 and NHDF cell lines suggested that complex 1 had enhanced growth-inhibitory potency over the other compounds and slightly affected normal cells as compared to the standard drug cisplatin, which may lead to its investigation as a promising anticancer agent in future research. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9064050 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
publisher | The Royal Society of Chemistry |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-90640502022-05-04 Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation Sakthikumar, Karunganathan Solomon, Rajadurai Vijay Raja, Jeyaraj Dhaveethu RSC Adv Chemistry Biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based transition metal(ii) complexes (1–5) were constructed as [M(II)(L) AcO]·nH(2)O {where M = Cu (1) n = 1; Co (2), Mn (3), Ni (4), n = 4 and Zn (5) n = 2}, which were synthesized from 2-(-(2-morpholinoethylimino) methyl)-4-bromophenol ligand (HL) and structurally characterized by various analytical and spectroscopic techniques, which proposed a square planar and tetrahedral geometry around the central metal ion with lattice water molecules. The gel electrophoresis results revealed that complexes 1 and 5 had more potent DNA cleavage efficacy in the presence of an oxidizing agent (H(2)O(2)) as compared to the others. The observed DNA binding results for all the compounds as determined by spectro-electrochemical and hydrodynamic techniques were in the order 3.36 (1) > 3.06 (2) > 2.73 (4) > 2.61 (5) > 1.84 (3) > 1.00 (HL) × 10(4) M(−1). The obtained bovine serum albumin (BSA) protein binding constant (K(b)) results put forward the following order 2.38 (1) > 2.21 (2) > 2.18 (5) > 1.76 (4) > 1.40 (3) > 1.26 (HL) × 10(4) M(−1). Also, the biothermodynamic parameters ([Image: see text] , [Image: see text] , ΔH° and ΔS°) and binding results divulged that all the complexes (1–5) could bind to DNA via intercalation in a spontaneous manner. Density functional theory calculations were employed to optimize the structure of ligand (HL) and its complexes (1–5) to gain insights into their electronic structures. Molecular docking analysis was carried out to identify the preferential binding modes of these complexes toward DNA and BSA protein. The theoretical observations of all cases were found to be very close to the experimental observations. Among the radical scavenging activity results for all the cases toward DPPH, hydroxyl radical, superoxide, nitric oxide and ferric reducing agents, complex (1) revealed a superior scavenging potency over the other compounds. In the screened antimicrobial reports against 10 different selected pathogenic species, although all the complexes (1–5) exhibited a greater significant inhibitory effect than the free ligand, complexes 4 and 5 achieved the best potency over standard drugs. The observed percentage of growth inhibition for all the compounds against the A549, HepG2, MCF-7 and NHDF cell lines suggested that complex 1 had enhanced growth-inhibitory potency over the other compounds and slightly affected normal cells as compared to the standard drug cisplatin, which may lead to its investigation as a promising anticancer agent in future research. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9064050/ /pubmed/35519345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09218d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
spellingShingle | Chemistry Sakthikumar, Karunganathan Solomon, Rajadurai Vijay Raja, Jeyaraj Dhaveethu Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title | Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title_full | Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title_fullStr | Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title_full_unstemmed | Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title_short | Spectro-electrochemical assessments of DNA/BSA interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
title_sort | spectro-electrochemical assessments of dna/bsa interactions, cytotoxicity, radical scavenging and pharmacological implications of biosensitive and biologically active morpholine-based metal(ii) complexes: a combined experimental and computational investigation |
topic | Chemistry |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9064050/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35519345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09218d |
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