The study of Mn-based superoxide dismutase mimic conjugated with a multimodal Re-probe in a cellular model of oxidative stress revealed that its bioactivity is associated with its accumulation at the mitochondria.
Manganese complexes with polydentate quinol-containing ligands are found to catalyze the degradation of superoxide through inner-sphere mechanisms. The redox activity of the ligand stabilizes higher-valent manganese species.
A superoxide dismutase mimic was functionalized with three peptides: -R9, -RRWWRRWRR or -Fx-r-Fx-K (MPP). They were studied in intestinal epithelial cells in an inorganic cellular chemistry approach: quantification, distribution and bio-activity.
In
the current work, we demonstrate ligand design concepts that
significantly improve the superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity of a
zinc complex; the catalysis is enhanced when two quinol groups are
present in the polydentate ligand. We investigate the mechanism through
which the quinols influence the catalysis and determine the impact
of entirely removing a chelating group from the original hexadentate
ligand. Our results suggest that SOD mimicry with these compounds
requires a ligand that coordinates Zn(II) strongly in both its oxidized
and reduced forms and that the activity proceeds through Zn(II)-semiquinone
complexes. The complex with two quinols displays greatly enhanced
catalytic ability, with the activity improving by as much as 450%
over a related complex with a single quinol. In the reduced form of
the diquinol complex, one quinol appears to coordinate to the zinc
much more weakly than the other. We believe that superoxide can more
readily displace this portion of the ligand, facilitating its coordination
to the metal center and thereby hastening the SOD reactivity. Despite
the presence of two redox-active groups that may communicate through
intramolecular hydrogen bonding and redox tautomerism, only one quinol
undergoes two-electron oxidation to a para-quinone
during the catalysis. After the formation of the para-quinone, the remaining quinol deprotonates and binds tightly to
the metal, ensuring that the complex remains intact in its oxidized
state, thereby maintaining its catalytic ability. The Zn(II) complex
with the diquinol ligand is highly unusual for a SOD mimic in that
it performs more efficiently in phosphate solution.
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