Issue 19, 2024

Unusual singlet oxygen-dependent hydroxyl radical production by a unique ruthenium-polypyridyl-hydroxamate complex under visible light irradiation

Abstract

Ruthenium polypyridyl complexes have been widely used in photodynamic therapy, during which singlet oxygen (1O2) plays a crucial role. Here, we synthesized a unique Ru complex Ru(bpy)2PhenHA (bpy – bipyridine, Phen – 1,10-phenanthroline, HA – hydroxamic acid) and unexpectedly found that not only 1O2, but also reactive hydroxyl radical (˙OH) could be produced under visible-light irradiation of Ru(bpy)2PhenHA in the presence of a classic spin trapping agent, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). Analogous ˙OH production was also observed with 3,3,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (TMPO), but not with other spin trapping agents. In contrast, much less ˙OH was produced when substituting Ru(bpy)2PhenHA with Ru(bpy)2Phen lacking the HA group. However, when N-methyl-benzohydroxamic acid (a typical HA with reducing properties) was added into the DMPO/Ru(bpy)2Phen/VIS system, not only ˙OH, but also the corresponding secondary nitroxide radical was clearly detected. Similar results were also observed with other structurally-different reducing agents. Further studies with other known spin trapping agents suggest that the [DMPO–OOH]˙ intermediate might be transiently produced and then rapidly decomposed to produce ˙OH. Taken together, the molecular mechanism for the unusual ˙OH production was proposed: visible-light irradiation of Ru(bpy)2PhenHA produced 1O2, which electrophilically added on DMPO, forming a peroxide intermediate, which then quickly decomposed to a biradical [DMPO–OO]˙˙. Then, H-abstraction took place between [DMPO–OO]˙˙ and the reducing hydroxamic acid, forming the unstable [DMPO–OOH]˙, which decomposed homolytically to produce ˙OH. These findings revealed a novel ˙OH-generating system mediated by Ru complexes, which were not only dependent on DMPO, but also on 1O2 and the presence of H-donating agents. These findings may have broad chemical and biomedical implications.

Graphical abstract: Unusual singlet oxygen-dependent hydroxyl radical production by a unique ruthenium-polypyridyl-hydroxamate complex under visible light irradiation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Research Article
Submitted
13 Apr 2024
Accepted
18 May 2024
First published
22 Aug 2024

Inorg. Chem. Front., 2024,11, 6549-6563

Unusual singlet oxygen-dependent hydroxyl radical production by a unique ruthenium-polypyridyl-hydroxamate complex under visible light irradiation

T. Tang, L. Mao, C. Huang, C. Zhao, Z. Liu, J. Chen and B. Zhu, Inorg. Chem. Front., 2024, 11, 6549 DOI: 10.1039/D4QI00853G

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