IR Spectroscopic
Methods for the Investigation of
the CO Release from CORMs
Posted on 2014-07-24 - 00:00
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a toxic gas
for mammals, and despite this
fact, it is naturally produced in these organisms and has been proven
to be beneficial in medical treatments, too. Therefore, CO-releasing
molecules (CORMs) are intensively developed to administer and dose
CO for physiological applications. Nearly all of these compounds are
metal carbonyl complexes, which have been synthesized and investigated.
However, for most of these CORMs, the exact reaction mechanisms of
CO release is not completely elucidated, although it is of utmost
importance. The widely used myoglobin assay for testing the CO release
has several disadvantages, and therefore, different methods have to
be applied to characterize CORMs. In this work, different setups of
IR absorption spectroscopy are used to analyze and quantify the CO
release during the decay of various CORMs: IR spectroscopy of the
gas phase is applied to follow the CO liberation, and attenuated total
reflection (ATR) IR spectroscopy is used to record the decay of the
metal carbonyl. IR spectroscopy supported by DFT calculations yields
valuable insights in the CO release reaction mechanism. The focus
is set on two different CORMs: CORM-2 (Ru2(CO)6Cl4) and on the photoactive CORM-S1 (photoCORM [Fe(CO)2(SCH2CH2NH2)2]).
Our results indicate that the CO liberation from CORM-2 strongly depends
on sodium dithionite, which is required for the commonly applied myoglobin
assay and that CORM-S1 loses all its bound CO molecules upon irradiation
with blue light.
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Klein, Moritz; Neugebauer, Ute; Gheisari, Ali; Malassa, Astrid; M. A. Jazzazi, Taghreed; Froehlich, Frank; et al. (2016). IR Spectroscopic
Methods for the Investigation of
the CO Release from CORMs. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp503407u