A DFT and TDDFT study of molecules with interest on photodynamic theraphy
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Fortes Ramos, Flavio Sousa
Russo, Nino
Bartolino, Roberto
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Metodologie Chimiche Inorganiche, Ciclo XXVI, a.a. 2011-2012; This PhD work concerns the theoretical photochemistry study of molecules with an interest on
Photodynamic Therapy (PDT). PDT is a medical technique for the treatment of different tumor
diseases, such as age related macular degeneration, psoriasis or bladder cancer. This technique is
increasingly being required, in particular in cases when conventional methods, chemotherapy and radio
therapy fail to be successful.
It consists of the administration of photosensitizer (a drug) followed by light irradiation and requires
the presence of molecular oxygen on tissue to be destructed. On molecular terms the action of the drug
is explained by the excitation of the drug to a singlet state after light irradiation, followed by its
conversion of to a triplet state.
This triplet state, in more common cases, directly transfers its energy to molecular oxygen producing
singlet oxygen. In other cases the photophysical parameters of the triplet state are such that it is allowed
to participate in electron transfer reactions, where it becomes reduced and after its anion reduces
oxygen forming radical oxygen species, that like singlet oxygen, is toxic to the cell, resulting in cellular
death by apoptosis or necrosis.
As chemists, our main interest is on the proposal of drugs with ideal photophysical and solution
properties. In regards to the first aspect, a drug should have an intense absorption on the red part of the
visible spectra, known as therapeutic window, where the body tissue has a better penetration.
Furthermore, the drug should have ideal photochemistry parameters to participate in the reaction. For
the activation of oxygen it should have a triplet energy higher than the 0.98 eV of oxygen triplet and for
others photochemical mechanism of action it should have the ideal parameters namely, ionization
potentials and electron affinities.
The drug should be soluble in water to react on the cells, that is usually provided by an hydrophilic
chemical group incorporated on the drug. In order to have fewer side effects and a decreased drug dose,
the drug should preferentially be localized on the tumor site.
In reality, the question to find an ideal drug goes beyond chemistry crossing the fields of physics and
clinical medicine. It involves physical problems like the interaction of light and body tissue with better dispositive or lasers for light irradiation to be developed. On the clinical part, it is evaluated on the in
vitro or in vivo toxicity of the drug as well as the drug’s side effects.
The organic and inorganic chemists are interested on the synthesis and characterization of the new
drugs.
The developments of new quantum mechanics methods with a good balance between accuracy and
computational cost, namely Density Functional Theory (DFT) allowed the theoretical chemists to
contribute to diverse fields like bio-medicine and other fields where the size of the systems can have
dimensions large enough to be studied by older quantum mechanics methods.
On the particular question of PDT, the simulation of electronic spectrum and calculation of
photochemical parameters can be a support to the work of experimentalist on his synthesis strategy and
on the interpretation of obtained data.
The chemist experimental work on PDT, usually starts with a tetrapyrrolic macrocycle, natural like
porphyrin or synthetic like phthalocyanine. Its structure is modified by the incorporation of substituent
groups (e.g phenyl groups) that extends the electron conjugation that can shift the maximum
absorption wavelength, λmax, to red part.
The possibility of predicting the effect of a substituent group can address the synthesis to a molecule
than another. Also, the calculation of the photochemical parameters of the drug allows the evaluation of
the feasibility of a mechanism. For example, the electronic energy of the first triplet state furnishes a
first estimation on the capability of a drug to generate singlet oxygen.
The theoretical methodology in this work is Density Functional Theory (DFT) for the optimization of
the structures and its time dependent formalism (TDDFT) for the calculation of electronic excitations.
The behavior in solutions is simulated by the solvent implicit methods(C-PCM).
On the first part of the study, we focus on two compounds designed to be used on PDT, belonging to
the class pentaporphyrins that are porphyrin like molecules containing five pyrrole rings. These
compounds were subject to clinical studies were they have shown a PDT action. We predict the
electronic spectra and further investigate the mechanism of action of these compounds. On a second part of the study, we focus on corroles - molecules analogues to porphyrin - and its metal
complexes, which synthesis were recently reported. We investigate the electronic spectra and evaluate
the ability to produce singlet oxygen.
The third part of the study consists on a non porphyrin based compounds – the squarines. These
molecules are much known to their use in photo cells devices. Their sharp transitions make them as
promising drugs to be used on PDT.; Università degli studi della CalabriaSoggetto
Chimica; Chimica inorganica; Raggi UV
Relazione
CHIM/03;