Literature DB >> 12132908

A new dinuclear vanadium(V)-citrate complex from aqueous solutions. Synthetic, structural, spectroscopic, and pH-dependent studies in relevance to aqueous vanadium(V)-citrate speciation.

M Kaliva1, T Giannadaki, A Salifoglou, C P Raptopoulou, A Terzis.   

Abstract

Vanadium interactions with low molecular mass binders in biological fluids entail the existence of vanadium species with variable chemical and biological properties. In the course of efforts to elucidate the chemistry related to such interactions, we have explored the oxidative chemistry of vanadium(III) with the physiologically relevant tricarboxylic citric acid. Aqueous reactions involving VCl(3) and anhydrous citric acid, at pH approximately 7, resulted in blue solutions. Investigation into the nature of the species arising in those solutions revealed, through UV/visible and EPR spectroscopies, oxidation of vanadium(III) to vanadium(IV). Further addition of H(2)O(2) resulted in the oxidation of vanadium(IV) to vanadium(V), and the isolation of a new vanadium(V)-citrate complex in the form of its potassium salt. Analogous reactions with K(4)[V(2)O(2)(C(6)H(4)O(7))(2)].6H(2)O and H(2)O(2) or V(2)O(5) and citrate at pH approximately 5.5 afforded the same material. Elemental analysis pointed to the molecular formulation K(4)[V(2)O(4)(C(6)H(5)O(7))(2)].5.6H(2)O (1). Complex 1 was further characterized by FT-IR and X-ray crystallography. 1 crystallizes in the triclinic space group P(-)1, with a = 11.093(4) A, b = 9.186(3) A, c = 15.503(5) A, alpha = 78.60(1) degrees, beta = 86.16(1) degrees, gamma = 69.87(1) degrees, V = 1454.0(8) A(3), and Z = 2. The X-ray structure of 1 reveals the presence of a dinuclear vanadium(V)-citrate complex containing a V(V)(2)O(2) core. The citrate ligands are triply deprotonated, and as such they bind to vanadium(V) ions, thus generating a distorted trigonal bipyramidal geometry. Binding occurs through the central alkoxide and carboxylate groups, with the remaining two terminal carboxylates being uncoordinated. One of those carboxylates is protonated and contributes to hydrogen bond formation with the deprotonated terminal carboxylate of an adjacent molecule. Therefore, an extended network of hydrogen-bonded V(V)(2)O(2)-core-containing dimers is created in the lattice of 1. pH-dependent transformations of 1 in aqueous media suggest its involvement in a web of vanadium(V)-citrate dinuclear species, consistent with past solution speciation studies investigating biologically relevant forms of vanadium.

Entities:  

Year:  2002        PMID: 12132908     DOI: 10.1021/ic010971v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0020-1669            Impact factor:   5.165


  2 in total

1.  Preliminary Assignment of Protonated and Deprotonated Homocitrates in Extracted FeMo-Cofactors by Comparisons with Molybdenum(IV) Lactates and Oxidovanadium Glycolates.

Authors:  Wan-Ting Jin; Hongxin Wang; Si-Yuan Wang; Christie H Dapper; Xing Li; William E Newton; Zhao-Hui Zhou; Stephen P Cramer
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 5.165

2.  α-Hydroxy coordination of mononuclear vanadyl citrate, malate and S-citramalate with N-heterocycle ligand, implying a new protonation pathway of iron-vanadium cofactor in nitrogenase.

Authors:  Can-Yu Chen; Mao-Long Chen; Hong-Bin Chen; Hongxin Wang; Stephen P Cramer; Zhao-Hui Zhou
Journal:  J Inorg Biochem       Date:  2014-08-11       Impact factor: 4.155

  2 in total

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