Is matching ruthenium with dithiocarbamato ligands a potent chemotherapeutic weapon in oncology?

Future Med Chem

Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Padova, Via Marzolo 1, Padova, 35131, Italy.

Published: September 2016

In the last years, several metal-based compounds have been designed and biologically investigated worldwide in order to obtain chemotherapeutics with a better toxicological profile and comparable or higher antiblastic activity than the clinically-established platinum-based drugs. In this context, researchers have addressed their attention to alternative nonplatinum derivatives able to maximize the anticancer activity of the new drugs and to minimize the side effects. Among them, a number of ruthenium complexes have been developed, including the compounds NAMI-A and KP1019, now in clinical trials. Here, we report the results collected so far for a particular class of ruthenium complexes - the ruthenium(II/III)-dithiocarbamates - which proved more potent than cisplatin in vitro, even at nanomolar concentrations, against a wide panel of human tumor cell lines.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4155/fmc.15.175DOI Listing

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