- Complexation of the antihypertensive drug oxprenolol with copper(II).
Complexation of the antihypertensive drug oxprenolol with copper(II).
The complexation between copper(II) and the antihypertensive drug oxprenolol (HOxp) was studied both in methanol and slightly alkaline aqueous media at Cu:HOxp molar ratio from 1:1 to 1:10. Copper(lI) forms two types of complexes-a mononuclear violet one, CuOxp2, with bidentately bound ligands and a green dimeric one, Cu2Oxp2Cl2, in which the two Cu(II) centres are linked by the ligand through oxygen bridges. The crystal structure of the Cu2Oxp2Cl2 complex consists of two crystallographically non-equivalent centrosymmetric copper dimers. Each copper atom is four-coordinated in a distorted square-planar environment. The Cu2O2 structural core is characterized by a Cu1-O1-Cu1' angle of 104.15(13)degrees (Cu2-O2-Cu2' 104.30(13) degrees) and a relatively short Cu1-Cu1' separation of 3.026(1) A (Cu2-Cu2'-3.023(1) A). Magnetic susceptibility and EPR measurements indicate an antiferromagnetic coupling of the copper(II) centers.