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1.
Cancer Biother Radiopharm ; 37(5): 342-354, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35426728

ABSTRACT

Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) has been extant for decades and continues to be practiced in many centers around the globe. Most of the active clinical trials utilize boronophenylalanine as the drug containing boron atoms. The important aspect that has been added to the BNCT practice is the use of an F-18 radiolabeled analog for ascertaining targeting and monitoring follow-up studies. The recent widespread application of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals, especially peptides (somatostatin analogs), prostate-specific antigen-binding ligands, or immunomolecules, offers the ambit for invention of new tumor-specific BNCT agents, especially for BNCT-susceptible tumors, that is, locoregional cancers such as head and neck cancer. Such BNCT agents, when radiolabeled, can enable simultaneous imaging and/or therapeutic applications (depending on the radionuclide used) through multimodal approaches. Development of boron-rich moieties such as sodium borocaptate and neutral carboranes combined with tumor-targeting moieties can lead to a new horizon in BNCT. The review covers various aspects of drug design, tumor targeting, and possible future radiopharmaceutical development for multimodal theranostic application in humans.


Subject(s)
Boron Neutron Capture Therapy , Head and Neck Neoplasms , Boron , Boron Compounds/therapeutic use , Boron Neutron Capture Therapy/methods , Head and Neck Neoplasms/drug therapy , Humans , Male , Precision Medicine , Radiopharmaceuticals/therapeutic use
2.
Dalton Trans ; 44(23): 10806-16, 2015 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25740594

ABSTRACT

Four new double perovskites, SrLaMReO(6) (M = Mg, Mn, Co, Ni) in which Re(5+) (5d(2)) is present, were prepared via conventional solid state reactions and characterized by X-ray and neutron powder diffraction, XANES, SQUID magnetometry, and muon spin relaxation (µSR). Synchrotron X-ray and neutron diffraction experiments confirmed that all compounds crystallize in the monoclinic P2(1)/n structure type, which consists of alternately corner-shared octahedra of MO(6) and ReO(6). Rietveld refinement results indicated anti-site mixing of less than 7% on the M/Re sites. Bond valence sum calculations (BVS) suggest all M and Re ions are 2+ and 5+, respectively, and for the Mn-containing phase this is also supported by XANES measurements. All of the materials are paramagnetic at room-temperature and their Curie-Weiss temperatures are positive (except for Mg) indicating net ferromagnetic interactions. No evidence for long-range magnetic order is evident in the dc magnetic susceptibility and µSR measurements for SrLaMgReO(6) to 2 K. The Mn-phase shows long-range order at T(C) = 190 K and neutron diffraction revealed a ferromagnetic structure with a refined net moment of ∼3.7µ(B). Both Co- and Ni-containing phases exhibit spin glass behavior at T(G) = 23 and 30 K, respectively, which is supported by neutron diffraction and a.c. susceptibility data. The structure and physical properties of these four new rhenium based ordered double perovskites are compared to the closely related "pillared perovskites", La(5)Re(3)MO(16), the isoelectronic Os(6+) (5d(2)) double perovskite Sr(2)CoOsO(6), and the Re(6+) (5d(1)) double perovskites, Sr(2)MReO(6), (M = Mg, Ca, Mn, Co, Ni).

3.
Inorg Chem ; 46(21): 8739-45, 2007 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17854173

ABSTRACT

The compound La(3)Re(2)O(10) has been synthesized by solid-state reaction and characterized by powder neutron diffraction, SQUID magnetometry, and heat capacity measurements. Its structure consists of isolated [Re(2)O(10)](9-) dimer units of two edge-shared ReO(6) octahedra, separated by La(3+) within the lattice. The Re-Re distance within the dimer units is 2.488 A, which is indicative of metal-metal bonding with a bond order of 1.5. The average oxidation state of the Re atom is +5.5, leaving one unpaired electron per dimer unit (S = 1/2). Although the closest interdimer distance is 5.561 A, the magnetic susceptibility data and heat capacity measurements indicate this compound exhibits both short- and long-range magnetic order at surprisingly high temperatures. The zero field cooled (ZFC) magnetic susceptibility data show two broad features at 55 and 105 K, indicating short-range order, and a sharper cusp at 18 K, which signifies long-range antiferromagnetic order. The heat capacity of La(3)Re(2)O(10) shows a lambda-type anomaly at 18 K, which is characteristic of long-range magnetic order. DFT calculations determined that the unpaired electron resides in a pi-bonding orbital and that the unpaired electron density is widely delocalized over the atoms within the dimer, with high values at the bridging oxygens. Extended Hückel spin dimer calculations suggest possible interaction pathways between these dimer units within the crystal lattice. Results from the calculations and fits to the susceptibility data indicate that the short-range magnetic ordering may consist of 1-D antiferromagnetic linear chains of coupled S = 1/2 dimers. The magnetic structure of the antiferromagnetic ground state could not be determined by unpolarized neutron powder diffraction.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(47): 14449-51, 2003 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14624593

ABSTRACT

The transformation of ammonium cyanate into urea, first studied over 170 years ago by Wöhler and Liebig, has an important place in the history of chemistry. To understand the nature of this solid state reaction, knowledge of the crystal structure of ammonium cyanate is a prerequisite. Employing neutron powder diffraction, we demonstrate conclusively that, in the structure of ammonium cyanate, the NH(4)(+) cation forms N-H...N hydrogen bonds to four cyanate N atoms at alternate corners of a distorted cube, rather than our previously proposed alternative arrangement with N-H...O hydrogen bonds to cyanate O atoms at the other four corners.

5.
Acta Crystallogr C ; 58(Pt 11): o672-4, 2002 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12415178

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of chlorofluoromethane, CH(2)ClF, has been determined at 100 and 30 K using indexing, packing considerations and Rietveld refinement of neutron powder profiles. There is only one phase, in monoclinic space group P2(1) and with two molecules in the unit cell occupying general positions. The structure has close packing in several directions and there are weak hydrogen bonds forming zigzag chains.

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