Arene ruthenium and pentamethylcyclopentadienyl rhodium and iridium complexes containing N,O-chelating ligands derived from piroxicam: Synthesis, molecular structure and cytotoxicity
Author(s)
Raja, Mathiyazhagan Ulaganatha
Riedel, Tina
Dyson, Paul J.
Date issued
2014
In
Inorg. Chim. Acta
Vol
PB
No
409
From page
479
To page
483
Subjects
ruthenium rhodium iridium piroxicam arene complex prepn piroxicam ruthenium complex prepn antitumor ovary human cancer crystal structure mol arene ruthenium complex piroxicam ligand prepn
Abstract
The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and anti-arthritic drug piroxicam (LH) reacts with arene ruthenium dichloride dimers in refluxing dichloromethane to give the complexes [(?6-arene)Ru(?2-N,O-L)Cl] (3: arene = C6H5Me, 4: arene = p-MeC6H4Pri, 5: arene = C6Me6). The reaction seems to proceed via the intermediates [(?6-arene)Ru(N-LH)Cl2], which can be obsd. for arene = C6H5Me (1) and isolated in the case of arene = p-MeC6H4Pri (2). The analogous reaction with pentamethylcyclopentadienyl rhodium and iridium gives the complexes [(?5-C5Me5)M(?2-N,O-L)Cl] (6: M = Rh, 7: M = Ir). The single-crystal x-ray structure analyses of the p-cymene ruthenium derivs. 4 and 2 show the metal atom in the archetypical piano stool geometry; in 4 the piroxicamato ligand is coordinated in a bidentate fashion through the pyridine nitrogen atom and the enolic oxygen atom, while in 2 the intact piroxicam ligand is coordinated in a monodentate fashion through the pyridine nitrogen atom. The piroxicamato complexes 3-5 are weakly cytotoxic towards human ovarian cancer cells. [on SciFinder(R)]
Publication type
journal article
