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Open Research Europe 2022Precious metal nanoparticles are key for a range of applications ranging from catalysis and sensing to medicine. While gold (Au), silver (Ag), platinum (Pt), palladium... (Review)
Review
Precious metal nanoparticles are key for a range of applications ranging from catalysis and sensing to medicine. While gold (Au), silver (Ag), platinum (Pt), palladium (Pd) or ruthenium (Ru) nanoparticles have been widely studied, other precious metals are less investigated. Osmium (Os) is one of the least studied of the precious metals. However, Os nanoparticles are interesting materials since they present unique features compared to other precious metals and Os nanomaterials have been reported to be useful for a range of applications, catalysis or sensing for instance. With the increasing availability of advanced characterization techniques, investigating the properties of relatively small Os nanoparticles and clusters has become easier and it can be expected that our knowledge on Os nanomaterials will increase in the coming years. This review aims to give an overview on Os and Os oxide materials syntheses and applications.
PubMed: 37645302
DOI: 10.12688/openreseurope.14595.2 -
Basic & Clinical Pharmacology &... Nov 2020Osmium tetroxide is a strong oxidizing agent used in electron microscopy. Eye exposure may cause severe burns, and after inhalation or ingestion damage to the...
Osmium tetroxide is a strong oxidizing agent used in electron microscopy. Eye exposure may cause severe burns, and after inhalation or ingestion damage to the respiratory or gastrointestinal tract occurs. Exposure to osmium and its compounds is extremely rare. We present a case of a 32-year-old female stained by 9 mL of 2% osmium tetroxide in acetone during an accident in the laboratory, with rare dermal and ocular findings. Due to lack of data in toxicological databases and the absence of antidote, the therapy was symptomatic. Osmium was detected in serum 19 hours later (0.22 μg/L) and in urine during the 15-hour collection (three samples-7.05, 1.65 and 8.45 μg/L). In blood serum on admission, after 1 and 2 days after exposure, the levels of iron (28.2, 39.8 and 50.5 μmol/L; reference range 5.8-34.5 μmol/L) and transferrin receptor/ferritine were elevated. To our knowledge, this is the first paper documenting a significant absorption from the skin and potentially from the eye conjunctiva, based on serum and urine analysis. The relationship between increased iron in blood and exposure has not been described yet, and the mechanism remains unknown. The patient is being followed up for the unknown long-term effects.
Topics: Adult; Eye; Female; Humans; Osmium Tetroxide; Skin
PubMed: 32524772
DOI: 10.1111/bcpt.13450 -
International Journal of Molecular... Apr 2022(1) Background: Ruthenium and osmium complexes attract increasing interest as next generation anticancer drugs. Focusing on structure-activity-relationships of this...
(1) Background: Ruthenium and osmium complexes attract increasing interest as next generation anticancer drugs. Focusing on structure-activity-relationships of this class of compounds, we report on 17 different ruthenium(II) complexes and four promising osmium(II) analogues with cinnamic acid derivatives as O,S bidentate ligands. The aim of this study was to determine the anticancer activity and the ability to evade platin resistance mechanisms for these compounds. (2) Methods: Structural characterizations and stability determinations have been carried out with standard techniques, including NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography. All complexes and single ligands have been tested for cytotoxic activity on two ovarian cancer cell lines (A2780, SKOV3) and their cisplatin-resistant isogenic cell cultures, a lung carcinoma cell line (A549) as well as selected compounds on three non-cancerous cell cultures in vitro. FACS analyses and histone γH2AX staining were carried out for cell cycle distribution and cell death or DNA damage analyses, respectively. (3) Results: IC50 values show promising results, specifically a high cancer selective cytotoxicity and evasion of resistance mechanisms for Ru(II) and Os(II) compounds. Histone γH2AX foci and FACS experiments validated the high cytotoxicity but revealed diminished DNA damage-inducing activity and an absence of cell cycle disturbance thus pointing to another mode of action. (4) Conclusion: Ru(II) and Os(II) compounds with O,S-bidentate ligands show high cytotoxicity without strong effects on DNA damage and cell cycle, and this seems to be the basis to circumvent resistance mechanisms and for the high cancer cell specificity.
Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Carcinoma; Cell Line, Tumor; Cisplatin; Coordination Complexes; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; Female; Histones; Humans; Ligands; Molecular Structure; Organometallic Compounds; Osmium; Ovarian Neoplasms; Ruthenium
PubMed: 35563367
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094976 -
Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) Mar 2021The synthesis of cyclometalated osmium complexes is usually more complicated than of other transition metals such as Ni, Pd, Pt, Rh, where cyclometalation reactions... (Review)
Review
The synthesis of cyclometalated osmium complexes is usually more complicated than of other transition metals such as Ni, Pd, Pt, Rh, where cyclometalation reactions readily occur via direct activation of C-H bonds. It differs also from their ruthenium analogs. Cyclometalation for osmium usually occurs under more severe conditions, in polar solvents, using specific precursors, stronger acids, or bases. Such requirements expand reaction mechanisms to electrophilic activation, transmetalation, and oxidative addition, often involving C-H bond activations. Osmacycles exhibit specific applications in homogeneous catalysis, photophysics, bioelectrocatalysis and are studied as anticancer agents. This review describes major synthetic pathways to osmacycles and related compounds and discusses their practical applications.
PubMed: 33809231
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26061563 -
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental... 2022Volume electron microscopy, a powerful approach to generate large three-dimensional cell and tissue volumes at electron microscopy resolutions, is rapidly becoming a...
Volume electron microscopy, a powerful approach to generate large three-dimensional cell and tissue volumes at electron microscopy resolutions, is rapidly becoming a routine tool for understanding fundamental and applied biological questions. One of the enabling factors for its adoption has been the development of conventional fixation protocols with improved heavy metal staining. However, freeze-substitution with organic solvent-based fixation and staining has not realized the same level of benefit. Here, we report a straightforward approach including osmium tetroxide, acetone and up to 3% water substitution fluid (compatible with traditional or fast freeze-substitution protocols), warm-up and transition from organic solvent to aqueous 2% osmium tetroxide. Once fully hydrated, samples were processed in aqueous based potassium ferrocyanide, thiocarbohydrazide, osmium tetroxide, uranyl acetate and lead acetate before resin infiltration and polymerization. We observed a consistent and substantial increase in heavy metal staining across diverse and difficult-to-fix test organisms and tissue types, including plant tissues (), nematode () and yeast (). Our approach opens new possibilities to combine the benefits of cryo-preservation with enhanced contrast for volume electron microscopy in diverse organisms.
PubMed: 36003147
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.933376 -
Chemical & Pharmaceutical Bulletin 2022Osmium is defined in the international council for harmonization (ICH-Q3D) guidelines as an element whose concentration can be determined by validated methods including...
Osmium is defined in the international council for harmonization (ICH-Q3D) guidelines as an element whose concentration can be determined by validated methods including microwave-assisted nitric acid digestion and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. However, microwave digestion using nitric acid is known to result in osmium recoveries higher than the theoretical values in spiked tests because of the formation of highly volatile osmium tetroxide in an oxidation reaction. To stabilize osmium, the addition of thiourea as a complexing agent has been tested and proved its utility. It remains unclear whether other compounds can prevent the over-recovery of osmium. In this study, we investigated four compounds, thiourea, ascorbic acid, sodium sulfite, and potassium metabisulfite, that could reduce the overestimation of osmium isotopes. The minimum amounts of thiourea, ascorbic acid, sodium sulfite, and potassium metabisulfite required to stabilize 10 ng/mL osmium in blank matrix were 1.0, 1.0, 2.5, and 2.5 g/L, respectively. The relative standard deviations obtained from 12 analyses for each stabilization solution were less than 3.3% in thiourea, 12.7% in ascorbic acid, 9.0% in sodium sulfite, and 10.6% in potassium metabisulfite. The stabilization solutions were investigated in a digested tablet matrix and were found to be effective. The impact of adding stabilization solutions on the determination of all ICH-Q3D element concentrations was also evaluated. As stabilization solutions had a small or significant impact on the determination of some elements, it was concluded that osmium determination should be conducted independently.
Topics: Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Isotopes; Mass Spectrometry; Microwaves; Osmium
PubMed: 34980735
DOI: 10.1248/cpb.c21-00739 -
Metallomics : Integrated Biometal... Feb 2021The organo-osmium complex [OsII(ɳ6-p-cym)(PhAzPy-NMe2)I]+ (FY26) exhibits promising in vitro antitumour activity against mouse hepatocarcinoma Hepa1-6 and other mouse...
The organo-osmium complex [OsII(ɳ6-p-cym)(PhAzPy-NMe2)I]+ (FY26) exhibits promising in vitro antitumour activity against mouse hepatocarcinoma Hepa1-6 and other mouse or human cancer cell lines. Here, we drastically enhance water solubility of FY26 through the replacement of the PF6- counter-anion with chloride using a novel synthesis method. FY26⋅PF6 and FY26⋅Cl displayed similar in vitro cytotoxicity in two cancer cell models. We then show the moderate and late anticancer efficacy of FY26⋅PF6 and FY26⋅Cl in a subcutaneous murine hepatocarcinoma mouse model. Both efficacy and tolerability varied according to FY26 circadian dosing time in hepatocarcinoma tumour-bearing mice. Tumour and liver uptake of the drug were determined over 48 h following FY26⋅Cl administration at Zeitgeber time 6 (ZT6), when the drug is least toxic (in the middle of the light span when mice are resting). Our studies suggest the need to administer protracted low doses of FY26 at ZT6 in order to optimize its delivery schedule, for example through the use of chrono-releasing nanoparticles.
Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; Cell Line, Tumor; Coordination Complexes; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Liver Neoplasms; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Nude; Tissue Distribution
PubMed: 33595653
DOI: 10.1093/mtomcs/mfaa003 -
Materials (Basel, Switzerland) Jun 2022Lead sludge from copper production is a source of rare metals, such as rhenium and osmium, whose content reaches 0.06-0.08% and 0.0025-0.0050%, respectively. The base of...
Lead sludge from copper production is a source of rare metals, such as rhenium and osmium, whose content reaches 0.06-0.08% and 0.0025-0.0050%, respectively. The base of the sludge consists of lead sulfate. A method of reductive smelting of lead sludge from copper smelting production at 1000-1100 °C has been developed. Coke was used as a reducing agent and sodium sulfate as a slag-forming material. Optimal conditions for selective extraction of rare metals in smelting products were found: osmium in the form of metallic form into raw lead and rhenium in the form of perrhenate compound NaReO into sodium-sulfate slag. The developed technology makes it possible to extract rhenium with a high degree of extraction in the form of water-soluble compounds for the subsequent production of commercial salts of rhenium by the known hydrometallurgical methods. The content of rhenium in the slag phase is 0.18-0.25%, with its initial content in the slime of 0.06-0.08%. The degree of rhenium concentration at the first stage of processing is 3-3.2 times in the form of water-soluble perrhenate. Osmium and lead do not form solid solutions; osmium in crude lead is mainly concentrated in the lower zones of lead. A method of obtaining a concentrate containing 53-67% osmium from raw lead with an initial content of 0.0025-0.0050% in the slurry and a concentration number of 13,000-21,000 times has been proposed.
PubMed: 35744129
DOI: 10.3390/ma15124071 -
Current Eye Research Aug 2018To examine the ultrastructure of lipofuscin bodies and melanosomes in retinal epithelium of elderly rhesus monkeys and determines changes in their number and morphology...
PURPOSE
To examine the ultrastructure of lipofuscin bodies and melanosomes in retinal epithelium of elderly rhesus monkeys and determines changes in their number and morphology as a function of retinal eccentricity.
METHODS
Electron microscopy was used to describe and quantify two major organelles in elderly monkey retinal epithelium, lipofuscin bodies and melanosomes, at different retinal loci extending from the macula to the peri-macula, equator, periphery and ora serrata. Osmium tetroxide was used to distinguish lipofuscin bodies from melanosomes.
RESULTS
Lipofuscin bodies and melanosomes diminished in number with advanced age but there was an inverse relationship between these two organelles. Lipofuscin bodies were more numerous in the macula and melanosomes more numerous in the peripheral retina. Three types of lipofuscin bodies were identified: 1) smaller and tending to locate in the middle third of the epithelial cell, 2) larger, less common, and located more basally, and 3) extremely rare, melano-lipofuscin, containing a melanosome. When osmicated, all lipofuscin bodies contained electron dense materials. When osmium tetroxide was not used for fixation, the first two types of lipofuscin bodies lost their electron densities while the third type retained its electron density due to the melanosome it contained.
CONCLUSION
As previously reported for human retina, lipofuscin is most abundant in the macular and peri-macular epithelium and least abundant in the periphery, whereas melanosomes show the opposite relationship. This distribution pattern could contribute to the macula's greater vulnerability to photo-toxicity. Three types of lipofuscin bodies are found in aging monkey retinal epithelium. All types contain electron dense material, but the most prominent two types lose their densities in the absence of osmium tetroxide during fixation. Most of the electron densities in lipofuscin bodies must contain a material that binds strongly to osmium tetroxide such as polyunsaturated fatty acids.
Topics: Aging; Animals; Electron Probe Microanalysis; Female; Lipofuscin; Macaca mulatta; Male; Melanosomes; Microscopy, Electron; Models, Animal; Osmium Tetroxide; Retinal Pigment Epithelium
PubMed: 29641909
DOI: 10.1080/02713683.2018.1464194 -
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry Sep 2020While many examples of osmium complexes, as anti-cancer agents, have been reported and some reviews have been devoted to this topic, a particularly interesting and... (Review)
Review
While many examples of osmium complexes, as anti-cancer agents, have been reported and some reviews have been devoted to this topic, a particularly interesting and synthetically accessible sub-class of these compounds namely those bearing a π- bound arene and phosphane co-ligand have escaped review. These complexes have made a surprisingly late entry in the literature (2005) in terms of anti-cancer investigations. This is somewhat surprising considering the plethora of analogous complexes that have been reported for the lighter analogue, ruthenium. Herein we review all complexes, neutral and ionic, bearing the "(ƞ-arene)Os(PR)" moiety focusing on their synthesis, reactivity, structural features (by X-ray diffraction analysis) as well as anti-cancer biological activity. An attempt is made throughout the article to contrast these to each other and to analogous Ru systems, and a full summary of all existing in vitro biological data is presented.
Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Cell Line, Tumor; Coordination Complexes; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Humans; Ligands; Organophosphorus Compounds; Osmium
PubMed: 32592914
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2020.112483