Title: Complexation
1Complexation
- Kausar Ahmad
- Kulliyyah of Pharmacy, IIUM
2Contents
- Lecture 1
- Formation of a complex ion
- Coordination compounds
- Ligands
- Types of bonding
- Shapes
- Lecture 2
- Chelates
- Organic molecular complexes
- Inclusion compounds
- Lecture 3
- Effect of complexation
- Applications
3Formation of a Complex Ion
- the filled ligand orbital overlaps the empty
metal ion orbital. - The ligand (Lewis base) donates the electron
pair, - The metal ion accepts it
- Form one of the covalent bonds of the complex
ion. - Such a bond, in which one atom in the bond
contributes both electrons, is called a
coordinate covalent bond.
4Complexes a.k.a. coordination compounds
- The substances contain at least one complex ion
- A species consisting of a central metal cation,
either a transition metal or a main-group metal,
that is bonded to molecules and/or anions (by
co-ordinate bonds) called ligands. - In order to maintain charge neutrality in the
coordination compound, the complex ions is
typically associated with other ions, called
counter ions
5The nature of ligands
- Simple ligands include water, ammonia and
chloride ions. - Have active lone pairs of electrons in the outer
energy level. - These are used to form co-ordinate bonds with the
metal ion. - All ligands are lone pair donors. In other words,
all ligands function as Lewis bases.
6Bonding in simple complex ionsAl(H2O)6 3
- What is the bonding in the complex ion formed
when water molecules attach themselves to an
aluminum ion to give Al(H2O)63? - What is the structure of an aluminum ion before
bonding?
7- aluminum has the electronic structure
- 1s22s22p63s23px1
- When it forms an Al3 ion it loses the 3-level
electrons - 1s22s22p6.....3s03px03py03pz03d03d0
- all the 3-level orbitals are now empty.
- The aluminum uses six of these to accept lone
pairs from six water molecules. - It re-organises (hybridises) the 3s, the three
3p, and two of the 3d orbitals to produce six new
orbitals all with the same energy.
8Al(H2O)6 3Why it chooses to use six orbitals?
..not four or eight?
- Six is the maximum number of water molecules
possible to fit around an aluminum ion (and most
other metal ions). - By making the maximum number of bonds, it
releases most energy and so becomes most
energetically stable.
9Al(H2O)6 3
- Only one lone pair is shown on each water
molecule. - The other lone pair on O is pointing away from
the aluminum and so is not involved in the
bonding. -
10Al(H2O)6 3
- Because of the movement of electrons towards the
centre of the ion, the 3 charge is no longer
located entirely on the aluminum, but is now
spread over the whole of the ion. - Because the aluminum is forming 6 bonds, the
co-ordination number of the aluminum is said to
be 6. The co-ordination number of a complex ion
counts the number of co-ordinate bonds being
formed by the metal ion at its centre. - Some ligands can form more than one co-ordinate
bond with the metal ion.
11Shapes of Complex Ions
- For coordination compounds, the geometry of the
complex ion is determined by - The number and the type of metal-ion hybrid
orbitals occupied by ligand lone pairs - Linear
- Octahedral
- Square planar
- Tetrahedral
12Linear
13Octahedral
- These are complex ions in which the central metal
ion is forming six bonds. .or attached to six
simple ligands. - These ions have an octahedral shape. Four of the
ligands are in one plane, with the fifth one
above the plane, and the sixth one below the
plane.
14Octahedral
15Tetrahedral
- E. g. CuCl42- and CoCl42-
- The copper(II) and cobalt(II) ions have four
chloride ions bonded to them rather than six,
because the chloride ions are too big to fit any
more around the central metal ion.
16Tetrahedral
17A square planar complex
- A 4-co-ordinated complex
- E.g. cisplatin which is used as an anti-cancer
drug. Cisplatin is a neutral complex - Pt(NH3)2Cl2
- It is neutral because the 2 charge of the
original platinum(II) ion is exactly cancelled by
the two negative charges supplied by the chloride
ions.
18A square planar complexCisplatin
- The platinum, the two chlorines, and the two
nitrogens are all in the same plane.
19Geometric isomerism
- This occurs in planar complexes like the
cisplatin. - There are two completely different ways in which
the ammonias and chloride ions could arrange
themselves around the central platinum ion
20How cisplatin works..
- Cisplatin may work by
- lying within the cancer cells DNA double helix
- Such that a donor atom on each strand
- Replaces a Cl- ligand
- And binds the Pt(11) strongly
- Preventing DNA replication
End of lecture 1/3
21 22Chelates
- A substance, chelating agent, containing
- Two (2) or more donor groups
- combine with a metal
- to form a complex known as a
- chelate.
23Complex metal ions containing more complicated
ligands
- If one ligand forms only one bond - unidentate.
- It only has one pair of electrons that it can use
to bond to the metal - any other lone pairs are
pointing in the wrong direction. - Some ligands, however, have more than one lone
pair of electrons - multidentate or polydentate
ligandsbidentate, quadridentate, hexadentate
24Bidentate ligands
- Bidentate ligands have two lone pairs, both of
which can bond to the central metal ion. - e.g. 1) 1,2-diaminoethane
- (old name ethylenediamine - often given the
abbreviation "en"), - e.g. 2) ethanedioate ion (old name oxalate).
25Continue Bidentate ligands
- In the ethanedioate ion, there are lots more lone
pairs than the two shown, - but these are the only ones important.
26- You can think of these bidentate ligands rather
as if they were a pair of headphones, carrying
lone pairs on each of the "ear pieces". - These will then fit snuggly around a metal ion.
27Ni (NH2CH2CH2NH2)3 2 or Ni(en)3 2
28A quadridentate ligand
- A quadridentate ligand has four lone pairs, all
of which can bond to the central metal ion. - E.g. haemoglobin
- The functional part of this is an iron(II) ion
surrounded by a complicated molecule called haem
(heme). - Haem is a hollow ring of carbon and hydrogen
atoms, at the centre of which are 4 nitrogen
atoms with lone pairs on them.
29Haem
- Haem is one of a group of similar compounds
called porphyrins. - They all have the same sort of ring system, but
with different groups attached to the outside of
the ring. - Each of the lone pairs on the nitrogen can form a
co-ordinate bond with the iron(II) ion - holding
it at the centre of the complicated ring of atoms.
- We could simplify the haem with the trapped iron
ion as
30Haemoglobin
- The iron forms 4 co-ordinate bonds with the haem,
but still has space to form two more - one above
and one below the plane of the ring. - The protein globin attaches to one of these
positions using a lone pair on one of the
nitrogens in one of its amino acids.
31Haemoglobin
- Overall, the complex ion has a co-ordination
number of 6 because the central metal ion is
forming 6 co-ordinate bonds. - The water molecule which is bonded to the bottom
position in the diagram is easily replaced by an
oxygen molecule (again via a lone pair on one of
the oxygens in O2) - and this is how oxygen gets carried around the
blood by the haemoglobin.
32- When the oxygen gets to where it is needed, it
breaks away from the haemoglobin which returns to
the lungs to get some more. - carbon monoxide is poisonous and it reacts with
haemoglobin. - It bonds to the same site that would otherwise be
used by the oxygen - but it forms a very stable
complex. - The carbon monoxide doesn't break away again, and
that makes the haemoglobin molecule useless for
any further oxygen transfer.
33A hexadentate ligand
- A hexadentate ligand has 6 lone pairs of
electrons - all of which can form co-ordinate
bonds with the same metal ion. - The best example is EDTA.
- EDTA is used as a negative ion - EDTA4-.
- Used as anti-coagulant for blood in laboratory.
34(No Transcript)
35EDTA in laboratory
- EDTA binds to clotting factors e.g. fibrinogen.
- Fibrinogen becomes inactive i.e. cannot function
as a coagulant. - This prevents blood from clotting.
36Cu(EDTA)2-
- The EDTA ion entirely wraps up a metal ion using
all 6 of the positions. - The co-ordination number is again 6 because of
the 6 co-ordinate bonds being formed by the
central metal ion.
37Organic Molecular Complexes
- Organic coordination compounds are held together
by weak valence forces. - Dipole-dipole, London forces, hydrogen bonding
- Cannot be separated from solutions
- Difficult to detect presence
- Possible if there is no steric hindrance
38e.g. 1) Quinhydrone Complexes
Whitening agent
- A complex of benzoquinone and hydroquinone
- Resulted from overlap of pi-framework of
electron-rich hydroquinone - Molecules polarise one another - charge transfer
complexes - May be contributed by hydrogen bonding
- E.g. quinhydrone of salicylic acid
- Use as organic electrode
39e.g. 2) Picric Acid Complexes
- Reaction between picric acid and weak bases
- E.g. Butesin2 picrate
- Reaction between picric acid and carcinogenic
agents - Complexation due to carcinogenic activity
- Reduces carcinogenicity
anaesthetic
antiseptic
40e.g. 3) Drug Complexes
- Interaction between caffeine and sulfonamide due
to - dipole-dipole force
- or hydrogen bonding between polarized carbonyl
group of caffeine and hydrogen atom of acid - Secondary non-polar interaction
- Reduced solubility of complex is possible!!!
41e.g. 4) Polymer complexes
Xlinked polyvinyl pyrrolidone
- Crosspovidone, porous polymer and dipolar, binds
with acetaminophen due to phenolic interaction
(drug) - Negative effect Tweens and salicylic acid
- Polyolefin container interaction with drugs
depends on octanol-water partition coefficient - Liquid form -gt loss of active component
- Drugs may precipitate, flocculate, -gtdelayed
biological absorption
End of lecture 2/3
42 43Inclusion Compounds
- These complexes are formed when a guest
molecule is partially or fully included inside a
host molecule . - physicochemical parameters of the guest molecule
are disguised or altered - improvements in the molecule's solubility,
stability, taste, safety, bioavailability, etc.
44Types of Inclusion Compounds
- Channel lattice type
- Layer type
- Clathrates or cage type
- Monomolecular inclusion compound
- Macromolecular inclusion compound
45Channel lattice type
- The crystals are arranged to form a channel
- Other molecules can fit into these channels
- Examples
- deoxycholic acid with paraffins, organic acids
- Urea thiourea with unbranched paraffins
- Starch-iodine solution
- Use of urea to separate long chain compounds?
46Channel type inclusion compound
- The TANO radical, C9H16NO2, forms stable
channel-type inclusion compounds with a large
variety of linear molecules. - The TANO host-matrix contains parallel channels
of 5 angstroms in diameter in which guest chains
are packed end to end. - Figures L guest in TANO matrix, RDiameter of
the channel
47Molecular structure of inclusion compound of
(4R,5R)-4,5-bis(hydroxydiphenylmethyl)2,2-dimethy
l-1,3-dioxolane with ethanol.
48Layer type
- The crystals are arranged to form layers
- Other molecules can fit into these layers
- Examples
- Montmorrillonite clay to trap HCs
- Graphite
49Clathrates
- The crystals are cage-like
- Guest is trapped in this cage
- Stability due to strength of cage
- Examples
- Hydroquinone allows specific size to be
entrapped such as methyl alcohol, HCl, CO2 - Warfarin sodium USP
50Monomolecular Inclusion Compounds
- A single guest molecule
- is entrapped in the cavity of
- one host molecule.
51e.g. Cyclodextrin
- A macromolecule cyclic oligosaccharides
- To increase solubility of poorly soluble drugs
- Hydrophobic interior, hydrophilic entrances
- Arrangement of the glucose units allows
accommodation of e.g. mitomycin C, aspirin,
morphine. - Activity of drugs depends on orientation in the
cavity and nature of reaction e.g. pH dependency.
52Cyclodextrin structure
53History of Cyclodextrin
- discovered in 1891 crystallization occurring in
a bacterial digest of starch. - evaluation of the unusual crystalline dextrins in
1903 suggested their cyclic nature but their
complete structural definition did not occur
until the 1940s. - This coincided with the identification of the
enzyme responsible for their production (Bacillus
macerans amylase, now referred to as cyclodextrin
glucosyltransferase), and the recognition of the
complexing properties of the CD cavity. - In the next 3040 years, extensive work resulted
in the ability to produce each of the parent CDs
in bulk quantities. - derivatives were prepared with the goal of
improving characteristics such as complexing
ability, solubility, and safety.
54Macromolecular Inclusion Compounds
- A.k.a molecular sieves
- Atoms are arranged in three dimensions to produce
cages and channels - Examples
- Zeolites (different pore size), dextrins, silica
gels
55Effects of Complexation
- Interaction between poorly soluble drug and a
soluble material may form a soluble
intermolecular complex. - Improved bioavailability e.g.
- Complexation of iodine with 10-15
polyvinylpyrrolidone to improve aqueous
solubility of active agent. - interaction of salicylates and benzoates with
xanthines, such as theophylline or caffeine.
56Continue Effects of Complexation
- Enhanced effect
- E.g. stimulant effect of caffeine increases in
the presence of ventolin - Reduced absorption
- Iron absorption is poor when taken with tea due
to complexation of Fe3 with tenate and phytate
57Applications
- Complexation to enhance the physicochemical
properties of pharmaceutical compounds. - based on the types of interactions and species
involved, e.g., - metal complexes,
- molecular complexes,
- inclusion complexes, and
- ion-exchange compounds.
58Drugs with ?-cyclodextrins
- Iodine/?-CD (gargle solution)
- Chloramphenicol/Me- ?-CD (eye drop)
- Cephalosporin ME 1207/?-CD (tablet)
- Dexamethasone/ ?-CD (ointment)
- From
- Encyclopedia of Pharmaceutical Technology 2nd.
Ed.
59Example CAPTISOLCyDex's SBE7-ß-CD product.
- a polyanionic ß-cyclodextrin derivative with a
sodium sulfonate salt separated from the
lipophilic cavity by a butyl ether spacer group,
or sulfobutylether (SBE). - does not exhibit the nephrotoxicity associated
with parent ß-cyclodextrin. - comparable or higher complexation characteristics
and superior water solubility
60Example CAPTISOL Extent of Drug Stability
- The extent of stabilization observed is related
to - the concentration of CAPTISOL
- the strength of the complex
- pH
- storage conditions
61Example CAPTISOL Improves Physical stability
- The shelf life of fosphenytoin, at pH 7.4 and
25C is increased from lt1 year to gt4.5 years - solubilizes the hydrolytically produced phenytoin
and prevents it from precipitation. - stabilizes some protein and peptide formulations
by minimizing aggregation, preventing adsorption
to containers and aiding in refolding. - The presence of SBE-CDs has been shown to
decrease the aggregation of insulin and nearly
doubles subcutaneous bioavailability to 96.
62Oral Clathration Therapy
- clathration therapy has many documented benefits
over chelation therapy - use for heavy metal poisoning, and for children
experiencing behavioral disorders including
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, bouts
of violence, and impaired IQ.
63Clathration Therapy vs. Chelation
- glycoproteins and peptides form inclusion complex
and multiple receptor sites attach to a toxic
molecule with irreversible bonds, literally
wrapping around the toxic substance to prevent
additional reactions with tissues or organs as it
is eliminated from the body. - Not one but three major types of bonds at
multiple points are created ionic, covalent and
hydrogen bonds. - Clinical reports indicate clathration therapy
might be a more effective heavy metal
detoxification therapy .
64- heavy metal chelation agents include
- ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA),
- d-penicillamine
- dimercaptoproponol.
- oral clathration agents include
- PCA and PCA-Rx from ASN/Maxam Nutraceutics
peptide clathration formula ever created for
natural detoxification - PCA-Rx is said to have a high bonding affinity
for heavy metals.
65References
- ME Aulton, Pharmaceutics The Science of Dosage
Form Design, Churchill Livingstone (2002) Chapter
21 - MS Silberberg, Chemistry The Molecular Nature of
Matter and Change 3rd. Ed., McGraw-Hill (2003)
Chapter 23 - H. Dodziuk (ed.), Cyclodextrins and Their
Complexes, Wiley-VCH Weinheim (2006) - http//www.cydexinc.com/faq.htm
- http//www.ru.ac.za/library/theses/temp/chen/Chapt
er7d.pdf