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Uncaging carbon disulfide. Delivery platforms for potential pharmacological applications: a mechanistic approach.

Anthony W DeMartinoMaykon Lima SouzaPeter C Ford
Published in: Chemical science (2017)
We describe the kinetics of the formation and decay of a series of dithiocarbamates under physiological conditions. The goal is to provide a toolbox of compounds that release CS2 by well-defined kinetics in such media. Carbon disulfide is a known environmental toxin, but there is fragmentary evidence suggesting that CS2 may have bioregulatory and/or therapeutic roles in mammalian biology. Further investigation of such roles will require methodologies for controlled delivery of this bioactive small molecule to specific targets. Reported here are mechanistic and computational studies of CS2 release from a series of dithiocarbamate anions (DTCs), where R2N represents several different secondary amido groups. The various DTCs under physiologically relevant conditions show a tremendous range of reactivities toward CS2 dissociation with decay lifetimes ranging from ∼2 s for imidazolidyldithiocarbamate (ImDTC-) to ∼300 s for diisopropyldithiocarbamate (DIDTC-) to >24 h for pyrrolidinyldithiocarbamate (PDTC-) in pH 7.4 phosphate buffer solution at 37 °C. Thus, by making the correct choice of these tools, one can adjust the flux of CS2 in a biological experiment, while the least reactive DTCs could serve as controls for evaluating the potential effects of the dithiocarbamate functionality itself. Kinetics studies and density functional calculations are used to probe the mechanism of DTC- decay. In each case, the rate of CS2 dissociation is acid dependent; however, the DFT studies point to a mechanistic pathway for ImDTC- that is different than those for DIDTC-. The role of general acid catalysis is also briefly probed.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • case control
  • human health
  • escherichia coli
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • ionic liquid
  • quantum dots
  • risk assessment
  • decision making
  • tissue engineering