Biospeciation of some of the most studied vanadium (symbol V) complexes with biological or medicinal activity is discussed in this review in order to emphasize the importance of the distribution of V species in biological media. The exact knowledge of the chemical species present in blood or cells may provide essential information about the biological effect of V potential drugs. In blood serum vanadium species can interact with low (citrate, lactate, oxalate, amino acids, etc., indicated with bL) and high molecular mass (proteins like transferrin, albumin, immunoglobulins, etc.) components, while the interaction with red blood cells can interfere with the transport of these drugs towards the target cells. The interaction with bLs and proteins is discussed through the analysis of instrumental and computational data. The fate of the active V species, when these are in the real serum samples and when reach and cross cell membranes, is also discussed. The differences in the V complexes selected in this review (donor atoms, stability, coordination geometry, electric charge, hydro- lipophilicity balance, substituents and redox properties) cover all the possible mode of interaction withbLs and proteins, allowing for the biodistribution of the studied compounds to be predicted. This approach could be applied to newly synthesized potential V drugs.

Pharmacologically active vanadium species: distribution in biological media and interaction with molecular targets / Sanna, Daniele; Garribba, Eugenio. - In: CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0929-8673. - 28:(2021), pp. 7339-7384. [10.2174/0929867328666210531144021]

Pharmacologically active vanadium species: distribution in biological media and interaction with molecular targets

Garribba, Eugenio
2021-01-01

Abstract

Biospeciation of some of the most studied vanadium (symbol V) complexes with biological or medicinal activity is discussed in this review in order to emphasize the importance of the distribution of V species in biological media. The exact knowledge of the chemical species present in blood or cells may provide essential information about the biological effect of V potential drugs. In blood serum vanadium species can interact with low (citrate, lactate, oxalate, amino acids, etc., indicated with bL) and high molecular mass (proteins like transferrin, albumin, immunoglobulins, etc.) components, while the interaction with red blood cells can interfere with the transport of these drugs towards the target cells. The interaction with bLs and proteins is discussed through the analysis of instrumental and computational data. The fate of the active V species, when these are in the real serum samples and when reach and cross cell membranes, is also discussed. The differences in the V complexes selected in this review (donor atoms, stability, coordination geometry, electric charge, hydro- lipophilicity balance, substituents and redox properties) cover all the possible mode of interaction withbLs and proteins, allowing for the biodistribution of the studied compounds to be predicted. This approach could be applied to newly synthesized potential V drugs.
2021
Pharmacologically active vanadium species: distribution in biological media and interaction with molecular targets / Sanna, Daniele; Garribba, Eugenio. - In: CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0929-8673. - 28:(2021), pp. 7339-7384. [10.2174/0929867328666210531144021]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/249671
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