| Literature DB >> 29207464 |
Hoda Pasdar1, Bahare Hedayati Saghavaz2, Naser Foroughifar3, Mehran Davallo4.
Abstract
A bioactive ligand and its dinuclear metal(II) complexes were synthesized and characterized by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), ultraviolet-visible (UV-Visible), nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H-NMR), mass spectroscopy and molar conductance measurements. The ligand has been crystalized in the monoclinic system with a P21/c space group. The biological activities of metal complexes were evaluated using disc diffusion and broth dilution methods. In vitro antibacterial activities of the ligand and their metal complexes were examined against two Gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus) and two Gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli and Serratia marcescens) and compared to the standard drugs. It was found that metal complexes displayed much higher antibacterial activities and better inhibitory effects than that of the ligand and standard drugs. Among these complexes, the compound having Zn-metal showed greater antibacterial activity against all four tested bacteria and was more effective against Serratia marcescens with the zone inhibition diameter of 26 mm and MIC value of 31.25 µg/mL.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial activity; broth dilution; dinuclear metal(II) complexes; disc diffusion; monoclinic system; symmetrical urea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29207464 PMCID: PMC6149768 DOI: 10.3390/molecules22122125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Different coordination modes of NO2 group.
Figure 2Crystal structure of ligand.
Figure 3Unit cell of C17H18N4O5.
Selected bond lengths (Å) and bond angles (°).
| Bond (Å) | Angle (°) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| O(1)-N(1) | 1.223(4) | O(1)-N(1)-O(2) | 123.7(4) |
| O(2)-N(1) | 1.223(4) | O(1)-N(1)-C(1) | 118.2(4) |
| O(3)-C(9) | 1.222(4) | O(2)-N(1)-C(1) | 118.0(4) |
| O(4)-N(4) | 1.204(4) | C(9)-N(2)-C(6) | 122.8(3) |
| O(5)-N(4) | 1.214(4) | C(9)-N(2)-C(7) | 116.6(3) |
| O(6)-N(5) | 1.213(4) | C(6)-N(2)-C(7) | 118.6(3) |
| O(7)-N(5) | 1.207(4) | C(9)-N(3)-C(12) | 123.4(3) |
| O(8)-C(26) | 1.213(4) | C(9)-N(3)-C(10) | 116.0(3) |
| O(9)-N(8) | 1.222(4) | C(12)-N(3)-C(10) | 119.5(3) |
| O(10)-N(8) | 1.221(4) | O(4)-N(4)-O(5) | 123.0(4) |
| N(1)-C(1) | 1.469(5) | O(4)-N(4)-C(17) | 118.7(4) |
| N(2)-C(9) | 1.383(4) | O(5)-N(4)-C(17) | 118.3(4) |
| N(2)-C(6) | 1.413(4) | O(7)-N(5)-O(6) | 125.4(5) |
| N(2)-C(7) | 1.470(4) | O(7)-N(5)-C(18) | 117.1(5) |
Physical properties of Ligand (L) and its metal complexes.
| Compounds | M.W. (g/mol) | Yield (%) | Color | Conductivity | M.P. (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L | 358 | 92 | Colorless | - | 149–151 |
| CuL | 645 | 87 | Dark green | 12 | 149–151 |
| CoL | 636 | 83 | Pale blue | 8 | 242–244 |
| NiL | 636 | 70 | Pale green | 10 | 240–242 |
| PtL | 910 | 50 | Dark brown | 14 | >300 |
| PdL | 730 | 75 | Black | 12 | >300 |
| CdL | 743 | 78 | Cream | 20 | 282–284 |
| ZnL | 648 | 80 | White | 14 | 250–253 |
Figure 4Proposed structure of metal complexes.
The Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy data of ligand (L) and its metal complexes.
| Compounds | (C-H)aromatic | (C-H)aliphatic | (NO2) | (NO2) | (C=O) | (OH)water | (M-O) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L | 3109 | 2975 | 1533 | 1373 | 1668 | - | - |
| CuL | 2996 | 2912 | 1592 | 1339 | 1663 | 3442 | 510 |
| CoL | 2996 | 2912 | 1592 | 1311 | 1661 | 3439 | 600 |
| NiL | 2996 | 2912 | 1592 | 1339 | 1661 | 3432 | 600 |
| PtL | 2996 | 2913 | 1437 | 1384 | 1657 | 3434 | 550 |
| PdL | 2996 | 2912 | 1592 | 1339 | 1661 | 3438 | 600 |
| CdL | 2996 | 2912 | 137 | 1311 | 1661 | 3435 | 550 |
| ZnL | 2996 | 2912 | 1437 | 1312 | 1661 | 3435 | 510 |
Electronic spectra data of ligand (L) and its metal complexes.
| Compounds | λMax (nm) | d-d Transitions |
|---|---|---|
| L | 260, 340 | - |
| CuL | 320, 490 | 2B1→2A1 |
| CoL | 350, 600, 700 | 4A1→4B1 |
| NiL | 295,410 | 3B1→3A2 |
| PtL | 280, 350, 560 | 3B1→3A1 |
| PdL | 260, 350, 510 | 3B1→3A1 |
| CdL | 295 | - |
| ZnL | 270, 350 | - |
Figure 5Mass fragmentation pattern of the CuL complex.
Figure 6Graphical presentation of antibacterial activity as inhibition zone diameters (mm) of ligand (L) and its metal complexes against pathogenic strains based on disc diffusion method.
Minimal inhibitory concentrations (µg/mL) of ligand (L) and their metal complexes against pathogenic strains based on broth micro-dilution method.
| Compounds | G(+) | G(-) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L | 1000 | 500 | 500 | 500 |
| CuL | 250 | 250 | 250 | 125 |
| CoL | 250 | 250 | 250 | 125 |
| NiL | 500 | 250 | 500 | 250 |
| PtL | 250 | 250 | 250 | 125 |
| PdL | 125 | 125 | 125 | 62.5 |
| CdL | 250 | 125 | 125 | 125 |
| ZnL | 125 | 125 | 125 | 31.25 |
| Tetracycline | 500 | 250 | 250 | 125 |
| Amikacin | 500 | 500 | 250 | 250 |
G(+) denotes Gram positive bacteria and G(−) denotes Gram negative bacteria.
Crystal structure data of ligand.
| Formula | C17H18N4O5 |
|---|---|
| Formula weight | 358.35 |
| System | Monoclinic |
| Color/shape | Colorless/plate |
| Space group | P 21/c |
| a (A°) | 15.516(3) |
| b (A°) | 16.826(3) |
| c (A°) | 14.975(3) |
| α (°) | 90 |
| β (°) | - |
| γ (°) | 90 |
| T (k) | 298(2) |
| V (Å-3) | 3645.2(14) |
| Z | 8 |
| Dcal (Mg/m3) | 1.306 |
| Absorption coefficient (mm−1) | 0.098 |
| Crystal size (mm) | 0.5 × 0.4 × 0.25 |
| θ Range (°) | 2.42 to 25.00 |
| Reflections collected | 16170 |
| Goodness-of-fit on F2 | 0.893 |
| Data/restraints/parameters | 6398/0/474 |
| Final R indices | R1 = 0.0677, wR2 = 0.0935 |
| R indices (all data) | R1 = 0.1928, wR2 = 0.1177 |
| Largest diff. peak and hole (e/Å-3) | 0.332 and −0.213 |