The synthesis of several cyclen based lanthanide [Eu(III) and La(III)] complexes is described; these metallo ribonuclease mimics are based on the use of alkyl amines as pendent arms, which give rise to fast hydrolysis within the physiological pH range of HPNP (an RNA model compound) that is highly dependent on the length of the alkyl spacer.
[reaction: see text] The macrocyclic cyclen conjugates 1-4 were synthesized with the aim of forming lanthanide ion-based macrocyclic conjugates possessing deep cavities, formed upon complexation to various lanthanide ions. These complexes all possess metal-bound water molecules, where the pKa of the water molecules depends on the nature of the cavity.
A series of substituted 1,4,7,10-tetraazacylcododecane ligands 1-4, possessing sensitizing nitrobenzene or naphthalene antennae, as one of the amide pendant arms, and their complexes with europium(III) were synthesised. The protonation constants and the metal ion stability constants of two of these ligands were determined by potentiometric titration. The pK a of the water molecules coordinated to the complexed metal ion were determined by both luminescent and potentiometric measurements. The luminescence pH dependence of a further three Eu(III) complexes, 5-7, which lack any antennae, were also studied with the aim of gaining a better understanding of the role of the metal bound water molecules in the luminescence properties of such complexes upon direct excitation of the lanthanide ion. The results from these luminescent measurements demonstrate that the Eu(III) emission was significantly modulated as a function of pH for all the complexes, which we assigned to changes occurring in the coordination environment of the ion within the cyclen system, caused by deprotonation of metal bound water molecules and/or deprotonation of pendent amide arms.
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