Abstract

Among all the bio‐metals, zinc and copper derivatives of ONS donor thiosemicarbazone have aroused great interest because of their potential biological applications. Multisubstituted thiosemicarbazone ligand H2dspt (3,5‐dichlorosalicylaldehyde‐N4‐phenylthiosemicarbazone) derived new ternary complexes like [Zn(dspt)(phen)]‧DMF (1) and [Cu(dspt)(phen)]‧DMF (2), and another thiosemicarbazone, H2dsct (3,5‐dichlorosalicylaldehyde‐N4‐cyclohexylthiosemicarbazone), derived [Cu(dsct)(bipy)]‧DMF (3). These complexes have been characterized by elemental analysis (CHNS), Fourier transform infrared (FT‐IR), ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis) and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H‐NMR) spectra. The structures of the complexes were obtained by single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction analysis. Compounds1and2got crystallized in the monoclinicP21/cspace group. The complexes showed interesting supramolecular interaction, which in turn stabilizes the complexes. The ground state electronic configurations of the complexes were studied using the B3LYP/LANL2DZ basis set, and ESP plots of complexes were investigated. The interaction of the complexes with calf thymus DNA (CT‐DNA) was studied using absorption and fluorescence spectroscopic methods. A UV study of the interaction of the complexes with calf thymus DNA (CT‐DNA) has shown that the complexes can effectively bind to CT‐DNA, and [Cu(dspt)(phen)]·DMF (2) exhibited the highest binding constant to CT‐DNA (Kb= 3.7 × 104). Fluorescence spectral studies also indicated that Complex2binds relatively stronger with CT DNA through intercalative mode, exhibiting higher binding constant (Kq= 4.7 × 105). The DNA cleavage result showed that the complexes are capable of cleaving the DNA without the help of any external agent. Molecular docking studies were carried out to understand the binding of complexes with the molecular target DNA. Complex2exhibited the highest cytotoxicity against human breast cancer cell line MD‐MBA‐231 (IC50= 23.93 μg/mL) as compared to Complex1(IC50= 44.40 μg/mL).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call