AI Article Synopsis

  • - Recent studies focus on Ag(I) coordination compounds as potential antibacterial and anticancer agents, specifically examining complexes with phosphines and thioamide ligands that have electronegative substitutions.
  • - Complexes 1-4 demonstrated moderate to high antibacterial activity and significant antiproliferative effects against various cancer cell lines, while complex 5 showed no activity.
  • - The complexes also displayed strong binding to drug-carrier proteins and notable antioxidant capacity, with molecular docking studies suggesting potential interactions with bacterial DNA and cancer cell receptors that could influence their bioactivity.

Article Abstract

In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the study of Ag(I) coordination compounds as potent antibacterial and anticancer agents. Herein, a series of Ag(I) complexes bearing phosphines and heterocyclic thioamide ligands with highly electronegative NH- and CF-group substituents, [AgCl(atdztH)(xantphos)] (1), [Ag(μ-atdztH)(DPEphos)](NO) (2), [Ag(atdzt)(PPh)] (3), [Ag(μ-atdzt)(DPEphos)] (4), and [Ag(μ-mtft)(DPEphos)] (5), where atdztH = 5-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-thiol, mtftH = 4-methyl-5-(trifluoromethyl)-1,2,4-triazol-3-thiol, xantphos = 4,5-bis(diphenylphosphino)-9,9-dimethylxanthene, and DPEphos = bis(2-diphenylphosphino-phenyl)ether, were synthesized, and their antibacterial and anticancer properties were evaluated. Complexes 1-4 bearing the NH-substituted thioamide exhibited moderate-to-high activity against , , and bacterial strains. A high antiproliferative activity was also observed for 1-3 against SKOV-3, Hup-T3, DMS114 and PC3 cancer cell lines (IC = 4.0-11.7 μM), as well as some degree of selectivity against MRC-5 normal cells. Interestingly, 5 bearing the CF-substituted thioamide is completely inactive in all bioactivity studies. Binding of 1-3 to drug-carrier proteins BSA and HSA is reasonably strong for their uptake and subsequent release to possible target sites. The three complexes show a significant antioxidant ability for scavenging free radicals, suggesting likely implication of this property in the mechanism of their bioactivity, but a low potential to destroy the double-strand structure of CT-DNA by intercalation. Complementary insights into possible bioactivity mechanisms were provided by molecular docking calculations, exploring the ability of complexes to bind to bacterial DNA gyrase, and to the overexpressed in the aforementioned cancer cells Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor 1, affecting their functionalities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2dt00793bDOI Listing

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