Abstract

Copper-selective ligands are essential tools for probing the affinity of cuproproteins or manipulating the cellular copper availability. They also harbor significant potential as antiangiogenic agents in cancer therapy or as therapeutics to combat copper toxicity in Wilson's disease. To achieve the high Cu(I) affinities required for competing effectively with cellular cuproproteins, we recently devised a ligand design based on phosphine-sulfide-stabilized phosphine (PSP) donor motifs. Building on this design strategy, we integrated two PSP donors within preorganized ligand architectures composed of either a hinged bithiophene backbone (bithipPS) or a single rigid thiophene bridge (thipPS). Extensive characterization based on X-ray crystal structures, solution NMR data, spectrophotometric titrations, and electrochemical studies established that bithipPS adapts well to the coordination preferences of Cu(I) to form a discrete air-stable mononuclear Cu(I) complex with a dissociation constant of 4 zM. In contrast, the wider bite angle of thipPS introduces some strain upon Cu(I) coordination to yield an almost 10-fold lower affinity with a Kd of 35 zM. As revealed by ICP-MS and two-photon excitation microscopy studies with the Cu(I)-selective fluorescent probe crisp-17, both ligands are effective at removing cellular copper from live mouse fibroblasts with rapid kinetics. Altogether, the stability and redox properties of PSP-ligand-Cu(I) complexes can be effectively tuned by judicious balancing of their geometrical preorganization and conformational flexibility.

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