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Synthesis of a Novel Trinuclear Palladium Complex: The Influence of an Oxime Chelate Ligand on Biological Evaluation Towards Double-Strand Dna, Bsa Protein and Molecular Modeling Studies Publisher



Karami K1 ; Mehri Lighvan Z1 ; Alizadeh AM2 ; Poshtehshirani M1 ; Khayamian T1 ; Lipkowski J3
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Department of Chemistry, Isfahan University of Technology, Isfahan, 84156/83111, Iran
  2. 2. Cancer Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Science, P.O: 1419733141, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3. Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kasprzaka 44/52, Warsaw, 01-224, Poland

Source: RSC Advances Published:2016


Abstract

A trinuclear palladium complex with an aryl oxime ligand, [Pd3(C12H8CNO)6], has been synthesized and structurally characterized by elemental analysis (C, H, N), IR, NMR resonance signals, and single crystal X-ray diffractometry. The crystal structure had a distorted square planar geometry. Binding interactions of the trinuclear Pd(ii) complexes with calf thymus deoxyribonucleic acid (CT-DNA) and bovine serum albumin (BSA) were investigated by vivid spectroscopic techniques and molecular modeling studies. In vitro studies (UV-vis spectroscopy, competitive emission titration, circular dichroism (CD) and helix melting methods) show that the complex interacts with DNA via a groove mechanism binding mode. The intrinsic binding constants, Kb, of the complex with CT-DNA obtained from UV-vis absorption studies were 2 ± 0.02 × 105 M-1. Moreover, the addition of the complexes to CT-DNA (1:2) led to an increase in the melting temperature of DNA, up to 2.97 °C. Competitive studies with methylene blue (MB), as a fluorescence probe with trinuclear palladium, revealed that it cannot release MB molecules of the DNA-bound MB, suggesting there is no competition with MB. Furthermore, the microenvironment and secondary structure of BSA are changed in the presence of the trinuclear Pd(ii) complex. Competitive binding using the site markers, Eosin and Ibuprofen, demonstrated that the complex binds to domain I (subdomain IIA) on BSA. Finally, molecular modeling studies were conducted to determine the binding sites of the DNA and BSA with the complex. © 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry.