Computational Prediction of Tc-99 NMR Chemical Shifts in Technetium Complexes with Radiopharmaceutical Applications

The Tc-99m nucleus is the most used nuclide in radiopharmaceuticals designed for imaging diagnosis. The metal can exist in nine distinct oxidation states and forms distinct coordination complexes with a variety of chelating agents and geometries. These complexes are usually characterized through Tc-...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory, 2022-08, Vol.126 (32), p.5434-5448
Hauptverfasser: de Andrade, Taís F. C. B., Dos Santos, Hélio F., Fonseca Guerra, Célia, Paschoal, Diego F. S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Tc-99m nucleus is the most used nuclide in radiopharmaceuticals designed for imaging diagnosis. The metal can exist in nine distinct oxidation states and forms distinct coordination complexes with a variety of chelating agents and geometries. These complexes are usually characterized through Tc-99 NMR that is very sensitive to the Tc coordination sphere. Therefore, predicting Tc-99 NMR might be useful to assist experimentalists in structural characterization. In the present study, we propose three computational protocols for predicting Tc-99 NMR chemical shifts based on density functional theory calculations using relativistic and nonrelativistic Hamiltonians: the relativistic Model 1, the nonrelativistic Model 2, and the empirical nonrelativistic Model 3. In Models 2 and 3, the NMR-DKH basis set was used for all atoms, including the Tc, for which it was developed here. All models were applied for a set of 41 Tc-complexes with metal oxidation states 0, I, and V, for which the Tc-99 chemical shift was available experimentally. The mean absolute deviation and the mean relative deviation were 67 ppm and 4.8% (Model 1), 92 ppm and 6.2% (Model 2), and 65 ppm and 4.9% (Model 3), respectively. Last, the effect of the explicit solvent was evaluated for the [TcO2(en)2]+Tc­(V) complex. The calculated results for the Tc-99 NMR chemical shift at SO-ZORA-SSB-D/TZ2P-ZORA/COSMO//TPSS/def2-SVP/IEF-PCM­(UFF) show that the inclusion of 14 water molecules (first solvation shell) together with the implicit solvation model leads to an absolute deviation of only 7 ppm (0.3%) from the experimental value, indicating that the solvent effects play a key role in predicting Tc-99 NMR.
ISSN:1089-5639
1520-5215
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpca.2c01617