Dinuclear vs. Mononuclear Copper(II) Coordination Species of Tylosin and Tilmicosin in Non-Aqueous Solutions

Molecules. 2022 Jun 17;27(12):3899. doi: 10.3390/molecules27123899.

Abstract

The veterinary 16-membered macrolide antibiotics tylosin (HTyl, 1a) and tilmicosin (HTilm, 1b) react with copper(II) ions in acetone at metal-to-ligand molar ratio of 1:2 to form blue (2) or green (3) metal(II) coordination species, containing nitrate or chloride anions, respectively. The complexation processes and the properties of 2-3 were studied by an assortment of physicochemical techniques (UV-Vis, EPR, NMR, FTIR, elemental analysis). The experimental data revealed that the main portion of copper(II) ions are bound as neutral EPR-silent dinuclear complexes of composition [Cu2(µ-NO3)2L2] (2a-b) and [Cu2(µ-Cl)2Cl2(HL)2] (3a-b), containing impurities of EPR-active mono-species [Cu(NO3)L] (2a'-b') and [CuCl2(HL)] (3a'-b'). The possible structural variants of the dinuclear- and mono-complexes were modeled by the DFT method, and the computed spectroscopic parameters of the optimized constructs were compared to those measured experimentally. Using such a combined approach, the main coordination unit of the macrolides, involved in the complex formation, was defined to be their mycaminosyl substituent, which acts as a terminal ligand in a bidentate mode through the tertiary nitrogen atom and the oxygen from a deprotonated (2) or non-dissociated (3) hydroxyl group, respectively.

Keywords: DFT/PCM calculations; copper(II) complexes; macrolide antibiotics; spectral properties.

MeSH terms

  • Coordination Complexes* / chemistry
  • Copper* / chemistry
  • Crystallography, X-Ray
  • Ligands
  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
  • Models, Molecular
  • Tylosin / analogs & derivatives

Substances

  • Coordination Complexes
  • Ligands
  • Copper
  • tilmicosin
  • Tylosin