Attaching Metal-Containing Moieties to β-Lactam Antibiotics: The Case of Penicillin and Cephalosporin.
María Moreno-LatorreMaría C de la TorreJavier A CabezaPablo García-ÁlvarezMiguel A SierraPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Procedures for the preparation of transition metal complexes having intact bicyclic cepham or penam systems as ligands have been developed. Starting from readily available 4-azido-2-azetidinones, a synthetic approach has been tuned using a copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition between 3-azido-2-azetinones and alkynes, followed by methylation and transmetalation to Au(I) and Ir(III) complexes from the mesoionic carbene Ag(I) complexes. This methodology was applied to 6-azido penam and 7-azido cepham derivatives to build 6-(1,2,3-triazolyl)penam and 7-(1,2,3-triazolyl)cepham proligands, which upon methylation and metalation with Au(I) and Ir(III) complexes yielded products derived from the coordination of the metal to the penam C 6 and cepham C 7 positions, preserving intact the bicyclic structure of the penicillin and cephalosporin scaffolds. The crystal structure of complex 28b , which has an Ir atom directly bonded to the intact penicillin bicycle, was determined by X-ray diffraction. This is the first structural report of a penicillin-transition-metal complex having the bicyclic system of these antibiotics intact. The selectivity of the coordination processes was interpreted using DFT calculations.
Keyphrases
- transition metal
- gram negative
- dna methylation
- sensitive detection
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- quantum dots
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gene expression
- molecular docking
- highly efficient
- molecularly imprinted
- electron microscopy
- dual energy