RESUMO
A practical, modular synthesis of targeted molecular imaging agents (TMIAs) containing near-infrared dyes for optical molecular imaging (OMI) or chelated metals for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and single-photon emission correlation tomography (SPECT) or positron emission tomography (PET) has been developed. In the method, imaging modules are formed early in the synthesis by attaching imaging agents to the side chain of protected lysines. These modules may be assembled to provide a given set of single- or dual-modal imaging agents, which may be conjugated in the last steps of the synthesis under mild conditions to linkers and targeting groups. A key discovery was the ability of a metal such as gadolinium, useful in MRI, to serve as a protecting group for the chelator, 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA). It was further discovered that two lanthanide metals, La and Ce, can double as protecting groups and placeholder metals, which may be transmetalated under mild conditions by metals used for PET in the final step. The modular method enabled the synthesis of discrete targeted probes with two of the same or different dyes, two same or different metals, or mixtures of dyes and metals. The approach was exemplified by the synthesis of single- or dual-modal imaging modules for MRI-OMI, PET-OMI, and PET-MRI, followed by conjugation to the integrin-seeking peptide, c(RGDyK). For Gd modules, their efficacy for MRI was verified by measuring the NMR spin-lattice relaxivity. To validate functional imaging of TMIAs, dual-modal agents containing Cy5.5 were shown to target A549 cancer cells by confocal fluorescence microscopy.
Assuntos
Gadolínio , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Gadolínio/química , Metais/química , Imagem Molecular , PeptídeosRESUMO
The new PtVO(SOCR)4 lantern complexes, 1 (R = CH3) and 2 (R = Ph) behave as neutral O-donor ligands to Ln(OR)3 with Ln = Ce, Nd. Four heterotrimetallic complexes with linear {LnOVPt} units were prepared: [Ln(ODtbp)3{PtVO(SOCR)4}] (Ln = Ce, 3Ce (R = CH3), 4Ce (R = Ph); Nd, 3Nd (R = CH3), 4Nd (R = Ph); ODtbp = 2,6-ditertbutylphenolate). Magnetic characterization confirms slow magnetic relaxation behaviour and suggests antiferromagnetic coupling across {Ln-O[double bond, length as m-dash]V} in all four complexes, with variations tunable as a function of Ln and R.
RESUMO
As the scale of microelectronic circuit devices approaches the atomic limit, the study of molecular-based wires and magnets has become more prevalent. Compounds with quasi-1D geometries have been investigated for their electronic conductivity and magnetic properties with potential use as nanoscale circuit components and information storage devices. To increase the number of compositionally tailored molecular systems available to study, we have taken a building-block, bottom-up approach to the development of improved electronic structure and magnetic properties of quasi-1D arrays. Over the past decade, a large family of asymmetric complexes that can assemble into extended arrays has resulted. Lantern (or paddle-wheel) complexes with conventional {O, O} donor carboxylates are legion, but by the use of monothiocarboxylate ligands and hard-soft Lewis acid-base principles, dozens of new lantern complexes of the form [PtM(SOCR)4(L)] (M = Mg, Ca, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Zn; R = Ph (tba = thiobenzoate), CH3 (SAc = thioacetate); L = neutral or anionic ligand) have been prepared. Depending on M and L, new intermolecular arrangements have resulted, and the magnetic properties have proven particularly interesting. In the solid state, the [PtM(SOCR)4(L)] building blocks are sometimes isolated, sometimes form dimers, and can be induced to form infinite chains. The versatility of the lantern motif was demonstrated with a range of axial ligands to form both terminal and bridged complexes with various 3d metals and two different substituted thiocarboxylate backbone ligands. Within the dozens of crystallographically characterized compounds that make up this family of lanterns, several different structural motifs of solid-state dimerization were observed and divided into four distinct categories on the basis of their Pt···Pt and Pt···S distances and relative monomer orientations. Among all of these compounds, three novel magnetic phenomena were observed. Initially, long-range antiferromagnetic coupling between two metals more than 8 Å apart was observed in solid-state dimers formed via metallophilic Pt···Pt interactions and could induced by choice of the terminal L group. An infinite chain was prepared in [PtCr(tba)4(NCS)]∞ that displays ferromagnetic coupling between Cr centers with J/ kB = 1.7(4) K. Homobimetallic quasi-1D chains of the form [Ni2(SOCR)4(L)]∞ (R = Ph, CH3; L = DABCO, pyz) were also prepared with S = 1 {Ni2} building blocks in which the Ni centers have two different spin states with weak antiferromagnetic coupling along the chain, such that -0.18 > J/ kB > -0.24 K. In the [Ni2(tba)4(quin)] derivative, a solid-state dimer forms with a bridging square conformation by interlantern Ni2S2 interactions and displays unusual S = 1 configurations on both Ni centers and weak antiferromagnetic coupling between them.