Paramagnetic Lanthanide NMR Probes Signalling Changes in Zinc Concentration by Emission and Chemical Shift: A Proof of Concept Study

Chemistry. 2019 Apr 26;25(24):6212-6225. doi: 10.1002/chem.201900609. Epub 2019 Apr 4.

Abstract

A zinc-selective probe based on a set of rare earth complexes of a modified DO3A macrocyclic ligand incorporating a tris-pyridylamine (TPA) moiety has been structurally characterised in solution and in the solid-state. One pyridine group possesses a tert-butyl substituent to serve as an NMR reporter group. The mono-capped square-antiprismatic Dy complex has a long bond (2.83 Å) to an apical N atom (pKa 5.70 Eu) and binds to one water molecule on zinc binding. Zinc binding is reversible and involves all of the exocyclic ligand N donors; it is signalled by large (ratiometric) changes in Eu emission intensity, and by dramatic changes in the size (>50 ppm) and sign of the chemical shift of the paramagnetically shifted tBu resonances in Tb, Dy and Tm complexes. Slow trans-metallation was observed, leading to formation of an unusual di-zinc species in which one zinc ion is seven-coordinate and the other is six-coordinate.

Keywords: NMR; emission; lanthanides; paramagnetic; zinc.