Abstract

Coordinated N,N',N"-trimethyldiethylenetriamine (Me3dien) has several possible configurations: two have mirror symmetry (R,S configurations at the terminal nitrogens) and the terminal N-Me's anti or syn with respect to the central N-Me (anti-(R,S) and syn-(R,S) isomers, respectively), and two are nonsymmetrical (R,R and S,S configurations at terminal nitrogens, rac denotes a 1:1 mixture of the two isomers). For each configuration, two Me3dienPtG atropisomers can be formed (anti or syn orientation of central N-Me and G 06, G = guanine derivative), and these can be observed since the terminal N-Me's decrease the rate of G rotation about the Pt-N7 bond. In symmetrical syn-(R,S)-Me3dienPtG derivatives with G = 9-EtG and 3'-GMP, the anti rotamer, which can form O6-NH H-bonds, was slightly favored over the syn rotamer but never more than 2:1. This anti rotamer is also favored by lower steric repulsion between the terminal N-Me's and G O6; thus, the contribution of O6-NH H-bonding to the stability of the anti rotamer could be rather small. With G = 5'-GMP, an O6-NH H-bond in the anti rotamer and a phosphate-NH H-bond in the syn rotamer can form. Only the syn rotamer was detected in solution, indicating that NH H-bonds to 5'-phosphate are far more important than to O6, particularly since steric factors favor the anti rotamer. Interconversion between rotamers was faster for syn-(R,S)- than for rac-Me3dien derivatives. This appears to be determined by a smaller steric impediment to G rotation of two "quasi equatorial" N-Me's, both on one side of the platinum coordination plane (syn-(R,S) isomer), than one "quasi equatorial" and one "quasi axial" N-Me on either side of the coordination plane (rac isomer).

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