Marine alkaloid rigidins are cytotoxic compounds known to kill cancer cells at nanomolar concentrations by targeting the microtubule network. Here, a rigidin analogue containing a thioether group was "caged" by coordination of its thioether group to a photosensitive ruthenium complex. In the dark, the coordinated ruthenium fragment prevented the rigidin analogue from inhibiting tubulin polymerization and reduced its toxicity in 2D cancer cell line monolayers, 3D lung cancer tumor spheroids (A549), and a lung cancer tumor xenograft (A549) in nude mice. Photochemical activation of the prodrug upon green light irradiation led to the photosubstitution of the thioether ligand by water, thereby releasing the free rigidin analogue capable of inhibiting the polymerization of tubulin. In cancer cells, such photorelease was accompanied by a drastic reduction of cell growth, not only when the cells were grown in normoxia (21% O) but also remarkably in hypoxic conditions (1% O). , low toxicity was observed at a dose of 1 mg·kg when the compound was injected intraperitoneally, and light activation of the compound in the tumor led to 30% tumor volume reduction, which represents the first demonstration of the safety and efficacy of ruthenium-based photoactivated chemotherapy compounds in a tumor xenograft.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b07225DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rigidin analogue
16
cancer cells
12
thioether group
8
lung cancer
8
cancer tumor
8
tumor xenograft
8
cancer
6
tumor
5
photo-uncaging microtubule-targeted
4
rigidin
4

Similar Publications

SHP1 is a protein tyrosine phosphatase playing a central role in immunity, cell growth, development, and survival. The inhibition of SHP1 can help in better prognosis in various disorders like breast and ovarian cancer, melanoma, atherosclerosis, hypoxia, hypoactive immune response, and familial dysautonomia. The currently available inhibitors of SHP1 have the side effect of inhibiting the activity of SHP2, which shares >60% sequence similarity with SHP1 but has distinct biological functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Marine alkaloid rigidins are cytotoxic compounds known to kill cancer cells at nanomolar concentrations by targeting the microtubule network. Here, a rigidin analogue containing a thioether group was "caged" by coordination of its thioether group to a photosensitive ruthenium complex. In the dark, the coordinated ruthenium fragment prevented the rigidin analogue from inhibiting tubulin polymerization and reduced its toxicity in 2D cancer cell line monolayers, 3D lung cancer tumor spheroids (A549), and a lung cancer tumor xenograft (A549) in nude mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are exploring synthetic versions of marine alkaloids called rigidins, known for their potential anti-cancer properties.
  • These synthetic compounds target cancer cell microtubules, leading to cell death, and can be created using simple one- or two-step processes.
  • Among variations studied, N9-substituted derivatives maintain strong anti-cancer activity even against drug-resistant cells, highlighting their potential as effective cancer treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rigidins (2-6) are pyrrolopyrimidine alkaloids isolated from marine tunicates. Since their isolation, refinement of their total syntheses, and biochemical evaluation, interest toward this pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidine scaffold as a medicinal candidate has been triggered. The derivatization of these natural products has led to the discovery of a novel range of 7-deazahypoxanthines, which exhibit extremely potent anticancer activity in human cancer cell lines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The treatment of readily available N-alkynyl-5-iodo-6-sulfamido-pyrimidines with iPrMgCl⋅LiCl followed by a transmetalation with CuCN⋅2 LiCl produces, after intramolecular carbocupration, metalated pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidines. Quenching of these pyrimidines with allylic halides or acid chlorides results in polyfunctional pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidines. Further reaction with ICl and a Negishi cross-coupling, using PEPPSI-iPr as the catalyst, furnishes fully substituted N-heterocycles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!