Cisplatin interaction with cysteine and methionine in aqueous solution: computational DFT/PCM study
Language English Country United States Media print
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
19227999
DOI
10.1021/jp807645x
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Amino Acids chemistry MeSH
- Chelating Agents chemistry MeSH
- Cisplatin chemistry MeSH
- Cysteine chemistry MeSH
- Nitrogen chemistry MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- Methionine chemistry MeSH
- Molecular Conformation MeSH
- Models, Molecular MeSH
- Computer Simulation MeSH
- Software MeSH
- Models, Statistical MeSH
- Models, Theoretical MeSH
- Thermodynamics MeSH
- Computational Biology methods MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Amino Acids MeSH
- Chelating Agents MeSH
- Cisplatin MeSH
- Cysteine MeSH
- Nitrogen MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- Methionine MeSH
In this paper we explore cisplatin interactions with sulfur-containing amino acids in a polarizable continuum model. Two cisplatin hydrated complexes were considered as reactants (chloro complex, cis-[Pt(NH3)2Cl(H2O)]+; hydroxo complex, cis-[Pt(NH3)2(OH)(H2O)]+). We considered the following reaction mechanism: first step, substitution of the aqua ligand by amino acid; second step, dissociative chelate formation. For the optimized complex (at the B3LYP/6-31+G(d)/COSMO level), the energy profile was determined using the B3LYP/6-311++G(2df,2pd) level and two different PCM models-COSMO and UAKS/DPCM methods which were adapted for use on transition metal complexes. The results show thermodynamic preference for bonding by cysteine sulfur followed by the amino group nitrogen, methionine thioether sulfur, and carboxyl-group oxygen. Methionine slightly prefers the Pt-N(Met) coordination in the chloro complex, but in the hydroxo complex it prefers the Pt-S(Met) coordination. A similar trend follows from the bonding energies: BE(Pt-S(Cys)) = 80.8 kcal/mol and BE(Pt-N(Met)) = 76 kcal/mol. According to the experimental observations, the most stable structures found are kappa2(S,N) chelates. In the case of methionine, the same thermodynamic stability is predicted also for the kappa2(N,O) chelate. This differs from the gas-phase results, where kappa2(S,N) and even kappa2(S,O) were found to be more stable than kappa2(N,O) complex.
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