What is it about?

Nitrosyl iron complexes belong to a new class of efficient exogenous donors of nitric oxide (NO), an important bioregulatory agent for various physiological processes (apoptosis in human leukemia erythroblastic cells and human colon carcinoma). We have chosen reduced glutathione (GSH) to study ligand exchange reactions with binuclear cationic tetranitrosyl iron complex.

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Why is it important?

Ligand-glutathione exchange reaction is very important for anti-tumor activity of the complex by causing its bifunctionality, i.e., in addition to the NO donating activity, this complex binds glutathione thus preventing S–S-glutathionation of essential enzyme systems and giving back the anti-tumor activity to them. The correlation between metabolism of GSH and such diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, cystic fibrosis, HIV and aging has been established. Moreover GSH may promote S-glutathionation of essential enzymes, receptors, structural proteins, transcription factors and transport proteins

Perspectives

Therefore it is crucial to understand whether this reaction is common for nitrosyl iron complexes with functional sulfur containing ligands, in particular, for complexes with cationic structure.

Evgeny Kabachkov
Institute of the Problems of Chemical Physics Russian Academy of Sciences

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This page is a summary of: Exchange of cysteamine, thiol ligand in binuclear cationic tetranitrosyl iron complex, for glutathione, RSC Advances, January 2014, Royal Society of Chemistry,
DOI: 10.1039/c4ra01766h.
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