New cobalt(II) and nickel(II) complexes of benzyl carbazate Schiff bases: Syntheses, crystal structures, in vitro DNA and HSA binding studies

May 22, 2018

Title

New cobalt(II) and nickel(II) complexes of benzyl carbazate Schiff bases: Syntheses, crystal structures, in vitro DNA and HSA binding studies

Author

Palanivelu Nithya, Sannasi Helena, Jim Simpson, Malaichamy Ilanchelian, Aathi Muthusankar, Subbiah Govindarajan

Year

2016

Journal

Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology

Abstract

In the present study, new Schiff base complexes with the composition [M(NCS)2(L1)2]·nH2O, where M = Co (n = 0) (1) and Ni (n = 2) (2); [M(NCS)2(L2)2], M = Co (3) and Ni (4) as well as [M(NCS)2(L3)2], M = Co (5) and Ni (6); (L1 = benzyl 2-(propan-2-ylidene)hydrazinecarboxylate, L2 = benzyl 2-(butan-2-ylidene)hydrazinecarboxylate and L3 = benzyl 2-(pentan-3-ylidene)hydrazinecarboxylate) have been synthesized by a template method. The complexes were characterised by analytical methods, spectroscopic studies, thermal and X-ray diffraction techniques. The structures of all the complexes explore that the metal(II) cation has a trans-planar coordination environment, the monomeric units containing a six-coordinated metal center in octahedral geometry with N-bound isothiocyanate anions coordinated as terminal ligands. Furthermore, the binding of the two Schiff base ligands to the metal centers involves the azomethine nitrogen and the carbonyl oxygen in mutually trans configuration. The binding interactions of all the complexes with Calf thymus-deoxyribonucleic acid (CT-DNA) and human serum albumin (HSA) have been investigated using absorption and emission spectral techniques. The CT-DNA binding properties of these complexes reveal that they bind to CT-DNA through a partial intercalation mode and the binding constant values were calculated using the absorption and emission spectral data. The binding constant values (~ 10 × 106 mol dm− 3) indicate strong binding of metal complexes with CT-DNA. HSA binding interaction studies showed that the cobalt and nickel complexes can quench the intrinsic fluorescence of HSA through static quenching process. Also, molecular docking studies were supported out to apprehend the binding interactions of these complexes with DNA and HSA which offer new understandings into the experimental model observations.

Instrument

FP-6600

Keywords

Fluorescence, Ligand binding, DNA structure, Protein structure, Inorganic chemistry, Biochemistry