4.8 Article

Nitric Oxide Generation on Demand for Biomedical Applications via Electrocatalytic Nitrite Reduction by Copper BMPA- and BEPA-Carboxylate Complexes

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages 7746-7758

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.9b01520

Keywords

electrocatalysis; nitric oxide; nitrite reduction; copper nitrite reductase; model complexes; intravenous catheters; modulated NO-release; inhaled NO therapy

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL132037-01A1]
  2. NSF [CHE-0840456]
  3. UM Detroit Research Internship Summer Experience (D-RISE) program - National Science Foundation [CHE-1305777]
  4. College of Literature, Science and the Arts at the University of Michigan
  5. Office of the Provost at the University of Michigan
  6. Cass Technical High School in Detroit

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Intravascular (IV) catheters are essential devices in the hospital that are used to monitor a patient's blood and for administering drugs or nutrients. However, IV catheters are also prone to blood clotting at the point of insertion and infection by formation of robust bacterial biofilms on their surface. Nitric oxide (NO) is ideally suited to counteract both of these problems, due to its ability to inhibit platelet activation/aggregation and its antimicrobial properties. One way to equip catheters with NO releasing properties is by electrocatalytic nitrite reduction to NO by copper complexes in a multilumen configuration. In this work, we systematically investigate six closely related Cu(II) BMPA-and BEPA-carboxylate complexes (BMPA = bis(2-methylpyridyl)amine); BEPA = bis(2-ethylpyridyl)amine), using carboxylate groups of different chain lengths. The corresponding Cu(II) complexes were characterized using UV-vis, EPR spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography. Using detailed cyclic voltammetry (CV) and bulk electrocatalyic studies (with real-time NO quantification), in aqueous media, pH 7.4, we are able to derive clear reactivity relations between the ligand structures of the complexes, their Faradaic efficiencies for NO generation, their turnover frequencies (TOFs), and their redox potentials. Our results show that the complex [Cu(BEPA- Bu)](OAc) is the best catalyst with a high Faradaic efficiency over large nitrite concentration ranges and the expected best tolerance to oxygen levels. For this species, the more positive reduction potential suppresses NO disproportionation, which is a major Achilles heel of the (faster) catalysts with the more negative reduction potentials.

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