Anti-Leishmanial Activity of Novel Homo- and Heteroleptic Bismuth(III) Thiocarboxylates
Details
Publication Year 2013-09,Volume 66,Issue #10,Page 1297-1305
Journal Title
Australian Journal of Chemistry
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Two new thiocarboxylic acids, p-bromothiobenzoic BTA and thionaphthoic acid TNA, and five new homo-and heteroleptic bismuth(III) compounds derived from thiocarboxylic acids: [Bi{S(C=O)C6H4Br}(3)] 1, [PhBi{S(C=O) C6H4Br}(2)] 2, [Bi{S(C=O)C10H7}(3)] 3, [PhBi{S(C=O)C10H7}(2)] 4, and [Ph2Bi{S(C=O)C10H7}] 5 were synthesised and fully characterised. The solid-state structure of complex [PhBi{S(C=O)C6H4Br}(2)] 2 was confirmed by X-ray crystallography. In complex 2, the two thiocarboxylate ligands are coordinated to the bismuth(III) centre in a didentate fashion, forming a distorted octahedral geometry in which the phenyl group and the lone pair are oriented axial to the plane formed by the two thiocarboxylate ligands. Long-range Bi-S interactions (3.54 angstrom) link these monomeric units to form a one-dimensional polymer. These compounds, in addition to six previously synthesised complexes: [Bi{SC(=O)C6H5}(3)] 6, [PhBi{SC(=O)C6H5}(2)] 7, [Ph2Bi{SC(=O)C6H5}] 8, [Bi{SC(=O)C6H4NO2}(3)] 9, [PhBi{SC(=O)C6H4NO2}(2)] 10, and [PhBi{SC(=O)C6H4SO3}] 11, and the thiocarboxylic acids themselves, were assessed for their in vitro activity against Leishmania major promastigotes, and for general toxicity against human fibroblast cells. The thiocarboxylic acids, with the exception of thiobenzoic acid and sulfothiobenzoic acid, were toxic to both L. major parasites and the mammalian cells at high concentrations of 50-100 mu M. The bismuth(III) thiocarboxylate derivatives proved to be more active than the corresponding acids. Among these, the heteroleptic phenyl-substituted bismuth(III) complexes 2, 4, 5, and 7 were highly active, showing IC50 (half maximal inhibitory concentration) values ranging from 0.39 to 4.69 mu M, and a clear ligand dependence on activity
Publisher
CSIRO
Research Division(s)
Inflammation
Publisher's Version
https://doi.org/10.1071/CH13374
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
© CSIRO 1996-2014


Creation Date: 2014-01-14 03:36:27
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙