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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1327
    Keywords: Key words Gd(III) complexes ; Contrast agents ; Proton relaxation enhancement ; Magnetic resonance imaging ; Human serum albumin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract  The non-covalent interaction between human serum albumin (HSA) and DOTA-like Gd(III) complexes containing hydrophobic benzyloxymethyl (BOM) substituents has been thoroughly investigated by measuring the solvent proton relaxation rates of their aqueous solutions. The binding association constants (K A) to HSA are directly related to the number of hydrophobic substituents present on the surface of the complexes. Furthermore, an estimation of ΔH° and ΔS° has been obtained by the temperature dependence of K A. Assays performed with the competitor probes warfarin and ibuprofen established that the complexes interact with HSA through two nearly equivalent binding sites located in the subdomains IIA and IIIA of the protein. Strong relaxation enhancements, promoted by the formation of slowly tumbling paramagnetic adducts, have been measured at 20 MHz for complexes containing two and three hydrophobic substituents. The macromolecular adduct with the latter species has a relaxivity of 53.2±0.7 mM–1 s–1, which represents the highest value so far reported for a Gd(III) complex. The temperature dependence of the relaxivity for the paramagnetic adducts with HSA indicates long exchange lifetimes for the water molecules dipolarly interacting with the paramagnetic centre. This is likely to be related to the formation, upon hydrophobic interaction of the complexes with HSA, of a clathrate-like, second-coordination-sphere arrangement of water molecules. Besides affecting the dissociative pathway of the coordinated water molecule, this water arrangement may itself significantly contribute to enhancement of the bulk solvent relaxation rate.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1434-1948
    Keywords: MRI Contrast agents ; GdIII complexes ; Relaxometry ; Water exchange ; Prototropic exchange ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A thorough investigation of the proton and oxygen-17 relaxation rates of water nuclei has been carried out for a solution containing an amphiphilic, paramagnetic GdIII chelate of potential interest as a contrast agent for MRI. It has been found that at pH = 7, 298 K and 20 MHz (proton observation frequency), the contribution to the overall relaxation enhancement from the water molecule in the inner coordination sphere is dominated by the relaxation time (T1MH) of its protons. However, upon formation of a slowly tumbling adduct with β-cyclodextrin, the observed relaxation enhancement is also affected by the exchange lifetime (T1MH) of the coordinated water and by the transfer rate of its protons. This situation has been exploited to assess the prototropic exchange rate from the coordinated water to the bulk, which is base-catalyzed. In fact, under these experimental conditions, at basic pH, the proton transfer is faster than the exchange of the whole water molecule, and it becomes the factor determining the observed relaxation enhancement. The effect is further enhanced at low temperature as a consequence of the concomitant lengthening of either τR (which causes a reduction of T1MH) and/or the exchange lifetime of the coordinated water molecule.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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