Structural Speciation of Ti(IV)-(α-Hydroxycarboxylic Acid) Complexes in Metabolism-Related (Patho)Physiology-In Vitro Approaches to (Pre)Adipocyte Differentiation and Mineralization.
Olga TsaveCatherine IordanidouAntonios HatzidimitriouMaria P YavropoulouEva N KassiNarjes Nasiri-AnsariCatherine GabrielAthanasios SalifoglouPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The prospect of developing soluble and bioavailable Ti(IV) complex forms with physiological substrates, capable of influencing (patho)physiological aberrations, emerges as a challenge in the case of metabolism-related pathologies (e.g., diabetes mellitus 1 and 2). To that end, pH-specific synthetic efforts on binary Ti(IV)-(α-hydroxycarboxylic acid) systems, involving natural physiological chelator ligands (α-hydroxy isobutyric acid, D-quinic acid, 2-ethyl-2-hydroxybutyric acid) in aqueous media, led to the successful isolation of binary crystalline Ti(IV)-containing products. The new materials were physicochemically characterized by elemental analysis, FT-IR, TGA, and X-ray crystallography, revealing in all cases the presence of mononuclear Ti(IV) complexes bearing a TiO 6 core, with three bound ligands of variable deprotonation state. Solution studies through electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) revealed the nature of species arising upon dissolution of the title compounds in water, thereby formulating a solid-state-solution correlation profile necessary for further employment in biological experiments. The ensuing cytotoxicity profile (pre-adipocytes and osteoblasts) of the new materials supported their use in cell differentiation experiments, thereby unraveling their structure-specific favorable effect toward adipogenesis and mineralization through an arsenal of in vitro biological assays. Collectively, well-defined atoxic binary Ti(IV)-hydroxycaboxylato complexes, bearing bound physiological substrates, emerge as competent inducers of cell differentiation, intimately associated with cell maturation, thereby (a) associating the adipogenic (insulin mimetic properties) and osteogenic potential (mineralization) of titanium and (b) justifying further investigation into the development of a new class of multipotent titanodrugs.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- solid state
- ionic liquid
- ms ms
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- single cell
- high resolution
- bone marrow
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- risk assessment
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- high throughput
- computed tomography
- copy number
- climate change
- genome wide
- quantum dots
- mental illness
- weight loss
- dual energy