Based on aqueous redox chemistry and simple in vivo models of oxidative stress, Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cationic Mn(III) N-substituted pyridylporphyrins (MnPs) have been identified as the most potent cellular redox modulators within the porphyrin class of drugs; their efficacy in animal models of diseases that have oxidative stress in common is based on their high ability to catalytically remove superoxide, peroxynitrite, carbonate anion radical, hypochlorite, nitric oxide, lipid peroxyl and alkoxyl radicals, thus suppressing the primary oxidative event. While doing so MnPs could couple with cellular reductants and redox-active proteins. Reactive species are widely accepted as regulators of cellular transcriptional activity: minute, nanomolar levels are essential for normal cell function, while submicromolar or micromolar levels impose oxidative stress, which is evidenced in increased inflammatory and immune responses. By removing reactive species, MnPs affect redox-based cellular transcriptional activity and consequently secondary oxidative stress, and in turn inflammatory processes. The equal ability to reduce and oxidize superoxide during the dismutation process and recently accumulated results suggest that pro-oxidative actions of MnPs may also contribute to their therapeutic effects. All our data identify the superoxide dismutase-like activity, estimated by log k(cat)O2-*), as a good measure for the therapeutic efficacy of MnPs. Their accumulation in mitochondria and their ability to cross the blood-brain barrier contribute to their remarkable efficacy. We summarize herein the therapeutic effects of MnPs in cancer, central nervous system injuries, diabetes, their radioprotective action and potential for imaging. Few of the most potent modulators of cellular redox-based pathways, MnTE2-PyP5+, MnTDE-2-ImP5+, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+, are under preclinical and clinical development.
Based on aqueous redox chemistry and simple in vivo models of oxidative stress, Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cationic Mn(III) N-substituted pyridylporphyrins (MnPs) have been identified as the most potent cellular redox modulators within the porphyrin class of drugs; their efficacy in animal models of diseases that have oxidative stress in common is based on their high ability to catalytically remove superoxide, peroxynitrite, carbonate anion radical, hypochlorite, nitric oxide, lipid peroxyl and alkoxyl radicals, thus suppressing the primary oxidative event. While doing so MnPs could couple with cellular reductants and redox-active proteins. Reactive species are widely accepted as regulators of cellular transcriptional activity: minute, nanomolar levels are essential for normal cell function, while submicromolar or micromolar levels impose oxidative stress, which is evidenced in increased inflammatory and immune responses. By removing reactive species, MnPs affect redox-based cellular transcriptional activity and consequently secondary oxidative stress, and in turn inflammatory processes. The equal ability to reduce and oxidize superoxide during the dismutation process and recently accumulated results suggest that pro-oxidative actions of MnPs may also contribute to their therapeutic effects. All our data identify the superoxide dismutase-like activity, estimated by log k(cat)O2-*), as a good measure for the therapeutic efficacy of MnPs. Their accumulation in mitochondria and their ability to cross the blood-brain barrier contribute to their remarkable efficacy. We summarize herein the therapeutic effects of MnPs in cancer, central nervous system injuries, diabetes, their radioprotective action and potential for imaging. Few of the most potent modulators of cellular redox-based pathways, MnTE2-PyP5+, MnTDE-2-ImP5+, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+, are under preclinical and clinical development.
The increasing awareness of the role of superoxide dismutase (SOD), and in particular
the mitochondrial isoform MnSOD under physiological and pathological conditions,
resulted in the increased search for their mimics. Few compounds are true SOD mimics,
i.e. able to catalytically remove superoxide (O2–·;
oxidize and reduce it in a two-step dismutation process). Thus far, no compound has been
reported to be a specific O2–· scavenger. Most of
the redox-active compounds explored as potential therapeutics are able to scavenge a
wide range of reactive species (though with different rate constants) and thus affect
the cellular redox status, oxidative damage of biological molecules, signaling processes
and in turn suppress the oxidative stress injuries. Both natural and synthetic compounds
have been explored. Most natural compounds are polyphenol based and are able to redox
cycle with reactive species between phenol/semiquinone (phenoxyl radical)/quinone forms,
thus suppressing oxidative stress injuries [for reviews, see [1,2,3,4,5]]; some of these natural compounds possess modest SOD-like
activity. Our studies have shown that the ability of compounds to mimic SOD parallels
their ability to scavenge other species and impact redox-based cellular transcriptional
activity. Most synthetic compounds contain a redox-active metal center and are therefore
able to easily exchange electrons with targets of interests such as reactive oxygen,
nitrogen and sulfur species as well as with redox units (cysteines) of cellular
signaling proteins involved in transcription. Such compounds are shown in figure 1 (Mn and Fe porphyrins) and in figure 2 (metallocorroles, metallotexaphyrins, Mn salen
derivatives and Mn cyclic polyamines) [for details, see also [6,7,8,9,10]]. In addition, simple metal salts and oxides, such as manganese
salts, cerium dioxide (CeO2), osmium tetroxide (OsO4) and Pt
nanoparticles are potent SOD mimics and have been explored for efficacy in in vivo
studies (fig. 2) [8,11,12,13]. Few compounds are redox active
but do not bear metals, such as nitroxides, nitrones, mitochondria-targeted ubiquinone
and its derivatives [8,9,14,15,16].
Fig. 1
Structures of redox-active metalloporphyrinoid compounds. Compounds that have anionic
or no charge on the periphery lack kinetic and thermodynamic facilitation for the
catalysis of O2–· dismutation essential for
mimicking SOD enzyme. By analogy with MnPs, FP15 [34,40,199], though not reported, likely possesses SOD-like activity in
addition to ONOO– scavenging ability.
Fig. 2
Structures of other metal-based redox-active compounds [11,12,13,18,20,41,45,46,200,201,202].
We have recently reviewed different classes of SOD mimics [8,9] and Mn porphyrins in
particular [6,7,10]. Herein we address the design of
Mn pyridylporphyrins (MnPs) and our most recent thoughts on their in vivo mechanisms of
action, bioavailability and therapeutic effects.
Design of Mn Porphyrin-Based Redox Regulators
Redox-active Mn porphyrins have been initially developed as mimics of SOD enzymes. Yet,
later it became obvious that SOD-like activity relates closely to their ability to
undergo diverse interactions with biological targets, which is the molecular basis for
their remarkable therapeutic efficacy. Thus, we will summarize here the principles of
their development as SOD mimics.There are 3 mammalian isoforms within the family of SOD enzymes: extracellular Cu,ZnSOD,
cytosolic/mitochondrial intermembrane Cu,ZnSOD and mitochondrial matrix Mn SOD. SOD
enzyme is a high-molecular-weight protein, and thus cannot cross the cellular membrane
[17]; further, its use could cause an
unfavorable antigenic response. The strategy adopted by Fridovich's group was to
mimic the properties of the SOD enzyme as closely as possible by employing
low-molecular-weight compounds, which would cross biological membranes and not exert
antigenicity. Archibald and Fridovich [18] showed
that low-molecular-weight Mn compounds possess SOD-like activity; the most potent is Mn
lactate – only 60-fold less potent than the SOD enzyme (fig. 3). Some organisms, such as Lactobacillus plantarum,
accumulate manganese in millimolar quantities and use it instead of SOD enzyme [18]. Compared to cationic
Mn(III)-ortho-N-substituted pyridylporphyrins, Mn2+ was of much lower
efficacy in protecting SOD-deficient Escherichia coli when growing
aerobically [19,20]. Thus, stable complexes based on porphyrin core have been developed where
Mn is coordinated to the porphyrin ligand. The porphyrin ligand has been modified to
finely tune the properties of the Mn trapped within the macrocyclic cavity so that it
can be as efficient as the SOD enzyme [7,8,21]. Both,
Fe and Mn can be used as redox-active metals. When scavenging
O2–·, the metal center of those complexes redox
cycles between +3 (more stable complex) and +2 (less stable complex)
oxidation states. During this process, the less stable complex may release some of its
metal. If the metal is Fe, a highly toxic species, hydroxyl radical (·OH), would
be formed by the interaction of the free Fe2+ with hydrogen peroxide
(Fenton chemistry). Due to the higher MnIII/MnII reduction
potential of +1.51 V versus a normal hydrogen electrode (NHE; relative to
+0.77 V vs. NHE for FeIII/FeII redox couple), the Mn
reaction with H2O2 is unfavorable, and thus Mn does not undergo
Fenton chemistry-based ·OH production. Consequently, we explored Fe porphyrins
less, and considered them inferior to Mn porphyrins. Recently, though, the potential of
Fe porphyrins has been reconsidered either for therapeutic or mechanistic purposes
[22].
Fig. 3
Structure-activity relationship between the SOD-like activity of compounds (expressed
in terms of the log of the catalytic rate constant kcat for
O2–· dismutation) and redox ability of Mn
center [expressed as the metal-centered reduction potential
E/ for the Mn(III)/Mn(II)
redox couple given in mV vs. NHE] [7,8,21]. At
negative potentials, Mn(III) cannot be reduced with
O2–· in the first step of the dismutation
process; thus, this step is rate-limiting in an
O2–· disproportionation process. Hence,
electron-withdrawing groups (positively charged quarternized nitrogens, or halogens)
were placed on the molecule to make the metal center electron deficient and thus
ready to accept electrons from O2–·. As the
electron deficiency of the metal site increases, so increases the kcat as
indicated by the left leg of the bell-shaped curve. At
E/ of approximately
+300 mV versus NHE, the Mn porphyrin is able to equally easily accept and
donate electrons to O2–·, and thus the rate
constants for both steps of dismutation are nearly identical [75]; in turn Mn porphyrin operates at very high kcat;
for some Mn porphyrins kcat is nearly identical to that of SOD enzyme. As
E/ increases further,
the Mn center becomes so electron deficient that it is stabilized in the +2
oxidation state, and its oxidation becomes the rate-limiting step of the catalysis;
consequently the kcat decreases as shown by the right leg of the
bell-shaped curve. Compounds with
E/ approximately
+500 mV, while of high kcat, are not stable and lose metal readily,
and in turn their function. MnTAlkyl-2-PyP = Mn(III)
meso-tetrakis(N-alkylpyridinium-2-yl)porphyrins; MnTAlkyl-3-PyP = Mn(III)
meso-tetrakis(N-alkylpyridinium-3-yl)porphyrins; MnTAlkyl-4-PyP = Mn(III)
meso-tetrakis(N-alkylpyridinium-4-yl)porphyrins; MnHalTAlkyl-2(3,4)-PyP = Mn(III)
β-halogenated meso-tetrakis(N-alkylpyridinium-2(3,4)-yl)porphyrins;
MnTAlkoxyalkyl-2-PyP = Mn(III) meso-tetrakis(N-alkoxyalkylpyridinium-2-yl)porphyrins;
MnTAlkoxyalkyl-3-PyP = Mn(III) meso-tetrakis(N-alkoxyalkylpyridinium-3-yl)porphyrins;
M40403 = cyclic polyamine; MnTBAP3– = Mn(III)
meso-tetrakis(4-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin; MnTSPP3– = Mn(III)
meso-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin. Adapted from Batinic-Haberle et al. [7].
The first notion that a cationic, water-soluble porphyrin ligand bound to metal presents
a strategy to mimic SOD was introduced by Pasternack and Halliwell [23] in 1979 on FeTM-4-PyP5+. The
rationale behind such a strategy was obvious: to utilize the same advantage of the
porphyrin cyclic structure that nature uses as a building block of numerous proteins and
enzymes – hemoglobin, myoglobin, the cytochrome P450 enzyme family, nitric oxide
(NO) synthases, etc., in order to conduct redox-based biological reactions such as
transport of oxygen, synthesis of NO, oxidation (breakdown) of toxins, etc. The cyclic
structure of a porphyrin ligand binds some metals (e.g. Mn3+,
Fe3+) so strongly that strong acids like hydrochloric and sulfuric
acids cannot cause the loss of the metal [7,8,24].
Consequently, the integrity of the metal site, where all actions of interest occur, is
preserved. One biologically relevant reagent that can destroy a porphyrin ring is
hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) [25,26,27]. This points to the crucial role of peroxide in vivo, and the reason why
so many systems are developed by nature to keep H2O2 at low
physiological nanomolar levels (catalases, glutathione peroxidases, glutathione
transferases, glutathione reductases, peroxiredoxins, thioredoxins, etc.) [28].The report by Pasternack and Halliwell [23] on
FeTM-4-PyP5+ was followed by studies of different investigators on
the reactions of Fe and Mn porphyrins with small molecules, such as oxygen, NO, carbon
monoxide, cyanide, etc. [29,30,31]. In the 1990s, Irwin
Fridovich's group started exploring Mn porphyrins as SOD mimics [32]. The work has been continued in the
Batinic-Haberle Laboratory. Several other laboratories are now involved in the
development of metalloporphyrins and in the exploration of the mechanistic aspects of
their mode(s) of action(s) [33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45]. The
modification of the porphyrin core by enlargement (texaphyrins) and shrinkage (corroles)
has been explored by Sessler's and Gross's groups, respectively (fig.
2) [46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54]. Mahammed and Gross [51] have
shown that metal complexes of ‘shrinked’ porphyrins –
metallocorroles – due to their enhanced stability in a higher +4 oxidation
state than that of porphyrins possess a fair catalase-like in addition to SOD-like
activity [46].
Cationic Mn Porphyrins
The design of an optimized Mn porphyrin structure was conducted in three phases. In
phase I we aimed to synthesize Mn porphyrins that have a rate constant for the
dismutation of O2–· as high as the SOD enzyme,
with log kcat(O2–·) =
8.84–9.30. To achieve such a value of kcat, we aimed to: (1) adjust
the half-wave reduction potential
(E/) of Mn porphyrins
for the redox couple MnIIIP/MnIIP, to be around +300 mV
versus NHE, similar to that of SOD enzyme, and (2) provide the electrostatic
facilitation that would guide the anionic superoxide to the redox-active Mn site. For
that reason, the cationic porphyrins were the compounds of choice as they bear 5
positive charges which guide O2–· to the Mn site
(fig. 1) [55,56]. When cationic nitrogens are
in ortho positions, the pyridyl substituents are stuck in vertical positions relative
to the porphyrin core and thus form a cavity which additionally guides
O2–· towards Mn [57]. Such a situation is reminiscent of the highly preserved
electrostatic ‘funnel’ lined with positively charged amino acid
residues that is believed to guide negatively charged superoxide towards the active
metal site of the SOD enzyme [56,58,59,60]. Moreover, such cationic
porphyrins, bearing 4 positively charged nitrogens in the vicinity of the Mn site
(ortho positions) withdraw electron density from the Mn center at an appropriate
magnitude, which in turn results in nearly identical thermodynamic properties of the
Mn site of the porphyrin, as found with all isoforms of SOD proteins, regardless of
the type of metal site (Fe, Cu, Mn or Ni). The resulting
E/ allows Mn porphyrins
and enzymes to oxidize (accept electrons, equation 1) and reduce
O2–· (donate electrons, equation 2) similarly
fast in a 2-step dismutation process described with equations 1 and 2:MnIIIP5+ +
O2–· ↔
MnIIP4+ + O2(1)MnIIP4+ + 2H+ +
O2–· ↔
MnIIIP5+ + H2O2(2)Based on the analysis of numerous Mn porphyrins that we have synthesized and some
commercial compounds, the structure-activity relationship between the ability of the
compound to mimic the enzyme [log
kcat(O2–·)] and its redox property
(E/, mV vs. NHE) for
MnIIIP/MnIIP redox couple (fig. 3) was established. The more positive
E/, the easier
MnIIIP is reduced to MnIIP by
O2–· in the rate-limiting first step of the
dismutation; consequently, the higher the kcat is of a given MnP (for
details, see also legend of fig. 3).Based on the critical role played by cationic substituents at the meso positions on
the SOD-like activity of the Mn(III) N-alkylpyridylporphyrins and their imidazolyl
analogs, N,N′-dialkylimidazolylporphyrins of comparable SOD-like potency
(table 1, fig. 1) were synthesized. The diethyl analog MnTDE-2-ImP5+
(AEOL10150) has been successfully explored for in vivo efficacy in diseases
associated with oxidative stress [61,62,63,64]. The most potent among those
compounds have E/ close to
that of the SOD enzyme (fig. 3; table 1). With two ortho and meta isomeric Mn
porphyrins [MnBr8TM-3(and 4)-PyP4+], the potency of the
SOD enzyme was reached [65,66]. With
MnCl5TE-2-PyP4+, an only slightly lower
kcat than that of SOD was achieved [67]. Those compounds with the highest kcat are derivatized in
both meso (substituted pyridyl groups) and beta positions (bromines or chlorines)
with electron-withdrawing groups [65,66,67].
Due to excessive electron-withdrawing effects, these porphyrin ligands are so
electron deficient that they do not have enough electron density to stabilize
+3 oxidation state of Mn, and thus are isolated as Mn(II) complexes. However,
these complexes with Mn bearing a 2+ charge (instead of 3+) are not
stable from a metal/ligand structural point of view and lose metal readily [55,65,66]. While they are of no
practical importance, their existence clearly shows that the same catalytic potency
as that of SOD protein could be achieved even with a small porphyrin ligand.
Table 1
Metal-centered reduction potential E½ versus NHE (for MnIIIP/MnIIP
redox couple), log kcat(O−) for the catalysis of
O− dismutation, log kred(ONOO–) for
the 1-electron reduction of ONOO– to ·NO2 and the
lipophilicity of Mn porphyrin-based SOD mimics expressed in terms of partition
between n-octanol and water, log POW
Redox-active compounds
E½/mV vs. NHE
log kcat(O−)
log kred(ONOO–)
log POW
Mn porphyrins
MnTM-2-PyP5+
+220
7.79
7.28
−8.16a
MnTE-2-PyP5+
+228
7.76 (cyt. c), 7.73 (p.r.)c
7.53
−7.79a
MnTnBu-2-PyP5+
+254
7.25
7.11
−6.19b
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
+314
7.48
7.11
−3.84b
MnTnHep-2-PyP5+
+342
7.65
−3.18b
MnTnOct-2-PyP5+
+367
7.71
7.15
−2.32b
MnTMOE-2-PyP5+
+251
8.04 (p.r.)
7.36
−7.52a
MnTMOHex-3-PyP5+
+68
6.78
−5.45b
MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+
+277
7.83
−4.10b
MnBr8TM-3-PyP4+
+468
>8.85
MnTCl5TE-2-PyP4+
+560
8.41
MnTDE-2-ImP5+
+346
7.83 (p.r.)
7.43
MnTTEG-2-ImP5+
+412
8.55
MnMImPh3P2+
6.92
4.78
[MnBV2–]2
+460c
7.4
[MnBVDME]2
+450c
7.7
[MnMBVDME]2
+440c
7.36
[MnBVDT2–]2
+470c
7.4
MnTBAP3–
−194
3.16
5.02
MnTCHP+
−200 to −400
5–6 [44]
Fe porphyrins
FeTM-2-PyP5+
+212
7.95
FeTE-2-PyP5+
+215
8.00
FP15
>8d
6.80 [116]
cis-FeTM-4-Py2P2P3+
7 [188]
INO-4885
7.7 [189]
Mn salens
EUK-8
−130
5.78 (cyt. c) [190]
EUK-134
~−130
5.78
EUK-189
~−130
5.78
−0.90 [113]
EUK-207
~−130
IC50 = 0.48 μM (NBT assay)
−1.41 [113]
EUK-418
IC50 = 1.73 μM (NBT assay)
0.548 [113]
Cyclic polyamine
M40403
+525 (ACN), +840 (water)
7.08
Nitroxides
Tempol
+810c
<3 (pH 7.8)
Tempone
+918c
<3 (pH 7.8)
4-Carboxy-tempo
7.54 (pH 5.4)
Mn corroles
MnTrM-2-corrole3+
+910e
5.94
MnTrM-3-corrole3+
+880e
6.34
MnTrM-4-corrole3+
+760e
6.27
MnTrF5P-β(SO3)2-corrole2–
+840e
5.68
Metals, metal ions and oxides
OsO4
9.14 (pH 5.1–8.7) [12]
CeO2 (3- to 5-nm particles)
9.55 [11]
Nano-Pt
IC50 = 48.9 μM (7.7 WST-1 assay) [13]
Mn2+
+850f
6.11 (cyt. c), 6.28 (p.r.)
Metallotexaphyrin
Gd(III) texaphyrin (XCYTRINTM)
−41g [53]
Natural compounds (polyphenols)
Curcumin
IC50 = 115 μM (NBT assay) [191]
Honokiol
5.5 [192]
MitoQ
−105 (MitoQ/UQH·), water
8.30 kox(O−)
3.44 (37° C, n-octanol/PBS)
SOD enzymes
~+300
8.84–9.30
3.97
For comparison, the values for some other compounds listed in figures 1 and 2 are
given also. In the absence of SOD enzyme, O− self-dismutes at pH
7.8 with a rate constant of k(O− self-dismutation) approximately
5 × 105 M−1 s−1. Therefore,
the compounds cannot be SOD mimics, if they disproportionate O−
with a rate constant equal to or lower than 5 × 105
M−1 s−1 [log k(O−)
≤5.7]. cyt. = Cytochrome; p.r. = pulse radiolysis; IC50 =
50% inhibitory concentration; NBT = nitroblue tetrazolium; ACN =
acetonitrile; MitoQ = mitochondria-targeted ubiquinone; UQH· =
ubisemiquinone; PBS = phosphate-buffered saline. E½ is
determined in 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.8, 0.1 M NaCl); kcat was
determined by cytochrome c assay in 0.05 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.8, at
25 ± 1° C); for detailed comparison of validity of cytochrome c vs.
NBT assay for kcat determination, see Batinic-Haberle et al. [193].
Data obtained from the relationship Rf vs. log POW (log POW
= 12.207 × Rf – 8.521) [9,
68], and direct determinations of log
POW for Mn(III) N-alkoxyalkylpyridylporphyrins; an error was made in
the calculation of log POW values and is corrected herein.
Determined experimentally using n-butanol and water biphasic system and converted
to log POW according to the equation log POW = 1.55 ×
PBW – 0.54; PBW is the partition between n-butanol
and water [68, 194].
The 1-electron reduction potential refers to the
RNO+/RNO· redox couple.
Estimated based on the determined kcat(O−) for
MnTTEG-2-PyP5+ [7,
8] and the relationship between the
kcat(O−) for FePs and MnPs [25].
E½ data associated with the MnIV/MnIII
reduction potential in mV vs. Ag/AgCl [46].
Oxidation potential only, MnIII/MnII redox couple is
irreversible.
Reduction potential only, in N,N-dimethylformamide. When references are not
indicated, the data are taken from Batinic-Haberle et al. [6,7,8].
In phase II we aimed to enhance the lipophilicity and in turn bioavailability of such
compounds via increasing the length of alkyl chains from methyl to octyl (table 1) [6,7,8,68]. The lipophilicity has been assessed by the
thin-layer chromatographic retention factor Rf, and a more commonly used
partition between n-octanol and water, log POW [68,69]. Data are shown in
table 1: the increase in alkyl chain from
ethyl (MnTE-2-PyP5+) to octyl (MnTnOct-2-PyP5+)
results in an approximately 5 orders of magnitude increase in lipophilicity, which
translates into an approximately 3 orders of magnitude increased efficacy of
lipophilic compounds in suppressing oxidative stress injuries in several animal and
cellular models [6,7,8]. To find out how
structural modifications of MnPs affect their in vivo availability, we developed
high-performance liquid chromatography/fluorescence and tandem liquid chromatography
mass spectrometry methods to determine MnP levels in plasma, tissues and subcellular
compartments [70,71,72]. MnPs bearing long
alkyl substituents (e.g. MnTnHex-2-PyP5+,
MnTnHep-2-PyP5+ and MnTnOct-2-PyP5+) have a
polar amphiphilic nature with cationic nitrogens and hydrophobic long alkyl chains
– which determines their micellar character. Due to the increased
lipophilicity, they accumulate in cells at higher levels. For both reasons,
surfactancy and high bioavailability, they are more toxic at high concentrations than
the more hydrophilic MnTE-2-PyP5+ [69,73,74].In an ongoing phase III we aimed to reduce the general toxicity via disrupting the
micellar property of these compounds by introducing oxygen atoms into hydrophobic
long alkyl chains. Our very first analogs of that type were
MnTMOE-2-PyP5+[75] and
MnTMOHex-3-PyP5+[74]. In
these compounds, oxygen atoms located at the end of alkyl chains are exposed to
solvent, which makes the compounds fairly hydrophilic. We have recently synthesized a
superior oxygen derivative, MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+ (fig. 1). This compound has oxygen buried deeper in the
alkyl chains, which prevents its excessive solvation [24]. When compared to MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnHep-2-PyP5+, it has significantly reduced toxicity but
preserved lipophilicity and high SOD-like activity [24]. The exploration of its in vivo efficacy and biodistribution is in
progress.
Anionic Mn Porphyrins
We have also listed in figure 2 the anionic Mn
porphyrin MnTBAP3– that has been often used by researchers,
presumably due to its commercial availability. With its
E/ of −194 mV
versus NHE, it is a fairly redox-inactive compound and is not able to catalyze
O2–· dismutation; thus it is not a SOD mimic
[76]. It cannot be reduced with cellular
reductants, ascorbate and glutathione, but it can be oxidized with strong oxidants
such as peroxynitrite (ONOO–), carbonate radical
(CO3–·) and likely hypochlorite
(ClO–). Since the reactivity towards
O2–· parallels the reactivity of MnPs towards
ONOO–, the ability of MnTBAP3– to reduce
ONOO– is modest, but if administered at high concentrations, it
may account for the reported beneficial in vivo effects [38,77]. In addition, the
electrostatic interactions disfavor reactions between the anionic
MnTBAP3– and anionic reactive species ONOO–,
CO3–· and ClO–, and thus
limit the magnitude of the related rate constants. Such a structure-activity
relationship is applicable to other anionic Mn porphyrins as well, such as
MnTSPP3–, MnBr8TSPP3– and
MnBr8TCPP3–. Despite having a favorable reduction
potential of approximately +200 mV versus NHE due to the strong
electron-withdrawing bromines at β-positions,
MnBr8TSPP3– and
MnBr8TCPP3– lack electrostatic guidance for
superoxide, thus demonstrate only fair SOD-mimicking potency.
Other Metal Complexes
In addition to Mn porphyrins, a few other compounds possess fair-to-high SOD-like
activity and are listed in table 1 and figures
1 and 2:
Mn(III) corroles, Mn(III) biliverdins, Mn(III) salen derivatives, Mn(II) polyamines
(M40403), as well as Fe(III) N-substituted pyridylporphyrins. FP15 and INO-4885 are
ortho Fe(III) N-substituted pyridylporphyrins with triethyleneglycolated and
4-carboxylatobenzyl substituents. Their design was governed by the same principles
(cationic charges at ortho-nitrogens) which provide Fe(III) and Mn(III)
N-alkylpyridylporphyrins with high SOD-like activity and high ability to reduce
ONOO– [22,25]. While not reported as SOD mimics, and
routinely viewed as peroxynitrite scavengers only, cationic Fe porphyrins are potent
catalysts of O2–· dismutation as well, and react
with other reactive species in a manner similar to Mn porphyrins (see under
‘Mechanism of action of Mn porphyrins’) [6,9]. Indeed, the SOD-like activity
of the Mn analog of FP15 MnTTEG-2-PyP5+ was reported to be log
kcat(O2–·) = 8.11 [78].
Simple O2–·-Specific Models for Initial
Evaluation of SOD Mimics
SOD-deficient E. coli mutants lacking cytosolic SOD enzymes (FeSOD and
MnSOD) cannot grow aerobically as well as the wild type [79,80]. Such mutants appeared as an
excellent tool, and an O2–·-specific model to
evaluate the potential of Mn porphyrin-based drug candidates [24,69,74,81]. Any MnP that has
reduction potential >+50 mV versus NHE has been tested in this
SOD-deficient E. coli model; any MnP which supported the aerobic growth
of the SOD-deficient E. coli was shown later to be efficacious in
animal models of oxidative stress injuries. Figure 4a illustrates identical effects of isomeric Mn ortho- and
meta-N-alkylpyridylporphyrins in allowing SOD-deficient JI132 E. coli
to grow as well as its SOD-proficient counterpart AB1157. The somewhat inferior SOD
efficacy of the meta analogs compared to the ortho species was compensated by their
better bioavailability (determined mainly by their higher lipophilicity) [68,69]. The
prokaryotic E. coli is much more sensitive to the toxicity of long
alkyl chain analogs, such as MnTnHex-2-PyP5+, than are the eukaryotic
yeast and mammalian cells [27,82].
Fig. 4
The efficacy of Mn porphyrins in protecting SOD-deficient organisms when grown
aerobically: prokaryotic E. coli and eukaryotic S.
cerevisiae. a SOD-deficient E. coli (JI132)
grew in M9CA medium. The wild type AB1157 and SOD-deficient strain JI132 were used.
Growth was followed turbidimetrically by measuring the absorbance at 600 nm as
described in details elsewhere [69,74]. b The wild-type yeast
S. cerevisiae strain used was EG103, which has a complete
genotype of MATα, leu2, his3, trp1 and
ura3. The sod1Δ mutant S.
cerevisiae strain, lacking Cu,ZnSOD, was EG118, which has a complete
genotype of MATα, leu2, his3, trp1, ura3 and
sod1Δ::URA3 [83]. Yeast grew in medium that contained peptone agar
supplemented with 2% dextrose and yeast extract. Growth was followed
turbidimetrically by measuring the absorbance at 600 nm. Modified from Rajic et al.
[24].
We have therefore recently employed the SOD-deficient Saccharomyces
cerevisiae aerobic growth as an additional tool to better evaluate the
therapeutic potential of lipophilic analogs [24,83]; a representative plot of
SOD-deficient yeast growth in the presence of Mn porphyrins is shown in figure 4b. The oxygen-derivatized
MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+ was efficacious but less toxic than its alkyl
analogs of similar lipophilicities, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnHep-2-PyP5+. These data parallel the toxicity data obtained in
a mouse study [24].
Bioavailability of Mn Porphyrins
Accumulation of Mn Porphyrins in Mitochondria and Nucleus
Despite their high positive charge, originally speculated to serve as a barrier,
these compounds accumulate to levels high enough at targeted sites (mitochondria and
nucleus) to afford protection from the damage due to oxidative stress. The cationic
charge, driven by the negative mitochondrial membrane potential and attracted by
anionic phosphate groups of cellular membranes, is the predominant reason for
accumulation of Mn porphyrins in the mitochondria.In an in vivo study, where porphyrin accumulation was investigated in heart
mitochondria of mice receiving single intraperitoneal drug injection at 2 mg/kg,
lipophilic compounds such as MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ accumulated
severalfold more in mitochondria than in cytosol compared to the hydrophilic analog
MnTE-2-PyP5+ (fig. 5)
[9]. A similar distribution of porphyrin was
registered with the yeast S. cerevisiae[72]. One of the evolutionary hypotheses claims that mitochondria
arose from symbiotic bacteria. Therefore we can compare data obtained on mouse
mitochondria to data obtained on the accumulation of Mn porphyrins in E.
coli. Lipophilic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ accumulates much more
in both cytosol and cell wall/membranes of E. coli than
MnTE-2-PyP5+[9]. To some
extent, cationic Mn(III) N-alkylpyridylporphyrins may mimic both cytosolic and
mitochondrial intermembrane space Cu,Zn SOD and matrix MnSOD. Our data on macrophages
and lipopolysaccharide-stimulated bone marrow-derived macrophages showed
approximately 3-fold higher levels of MnTE- 2-PyP5+ in the nucleus
than in the cytosol, driven there by negatively charged phosphates of nucleic acids
[10].
Fig. 5
Distribution of Mn porphyrins in mouse heart and prokaryotic E.
coli. In both systems, the more lipophilic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
accumulated at severalfold higher levels in mitochondria and cytosol of mouse heart
and in cytosol and membranes (resembling mitochondria with inner and outer membranes)
than the hydrophilic MnTE-2-PyP5+. Single injection of
MnTE-2-PyP5+ was 10 mg/kg and 2 mg/kg of
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ [9,24]. E. coli grew for 1 h in
M9CA medium supplied with 5 µM MnPs. Adapted from Miriyala et al.
[9].
Accumulation of Mn Porphyrins in the Brain
Initial efficacy studies of central nervous system injuries indicated that cationic
Mn porphyrins are able to cross the blood-brain barrier [9,72,84]. Even the excessively charged and hydrophilic
MnTE-2-PyP5+ accumulates over a 7-day period in the brain while
its levels in other organs after initial build-up decrease in the same period of time
[9,72,84]. The brain is rich in
phospholipids and thus in anionic phosphates; this appears to be a driving force for
the brain accumulation of pentacationic MnPs. After a single injection of 2 mg/kg,
the lipophilic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ accumulates at 24 h to an
approximately 9-fold higher level in the mouse brain than does
MnTE-2-PyP5+ at 10 mg/kg [85]. In a pharmacokinetic rat study, we reported for the first time the
brain levels of MnTnHex-2-PyP5, which correspond to its remarkable
efficacy in a stroke model (see under ‘Stroke’) [85].
Oral Availability of Mn Porphyrins
Comprehensive pharmacokinetic studies via intravenous, intraperitoneal and oral
routes of administration were performed for cationic MnTE-2-PyP5+
(10 mg/kg) and MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (0.5 or 2 mg/kg) [70,86].
Though highly charged and fairly hydrophilic, both compounds are orally available.
The plasma oral availability (expressed as AUCORAL/AUCIV) was
found to be 23 and 20% for MnTE-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+, respectively. The plasma AUCIP was
found to be 83% of AUCIV for MnTE-2-PyP5+ at 10
mg/kg and 84% for MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ at 0.5 mg/kg. The organ
oral availability (based on the combined AUC of plasma and AUC of vital organs:
liver, kidney, spleen, heart, lung, brain) expressed as
AUCORGAN(oral)/AUCORGAN(ip) was found to be 13 and
33% for MnTE-2-PyP5+ and MnTnHex-2-PyP5+,
respectively. The less hydrophilic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ is approximately
2.5-fold superior relative to MnTE-2-PyP5+ with regard to organ
distribution. The data demonstrate the impact of lipophilicity and pentacationic
charge on MnP biodistribution and oral availability [86].
Mechanism of Action of Mn Porphyrins
Cationic Mn(III) pyridyl and imidazolyl porphyrins are among the most potent synthetic
SOD mimics available. However, the reactivity of MnPs towards
O2–· is not specific. MnPs are also highly
reactive towards ONOO– and CO3–·
(the degradation product of ONOO– and CO2 adduct; fig.
6). The kred(ONOO–)
parallels the kcat(O2–·) for Mn(III)
N-alkylpyridylporphyrins [77]. Such a
relationship is due to the same thermodynamic and electrostatic factors that favor the
reaction of the cationic, electron-deficient metal complex with anionic species [6,7,8,10].
Therefore, the cationic MnPs with the highest
kcat(O2–·) are the most potent scavengers of
ONOO– while anionic porphyrins [MnTBAP3–,
FeTBAP3–, FeTSPP3–,
FeT(2,4,6-Me2–3,5-[SO3]2-P)P7–]
and metal complexes that have no charges on the periphery and bear electron-rich metal
sites [MnTCHP+, Mn(III) complex with
bis(dihydroxyphenyl)dipyrromethene derivative, EUK-418 and AEOL11207; fig. 1, 2] are
inferior [45,87,88,89,90]. MnTE-2-PyP5+
reacts with high affinity, rapidly and stoichiometrically with ·NO [91]. Studies are in progress with the group of
Ferrer-Sueta on the reactivity of MnPs towards hypochlorite formed in vivo by the action
of myeloperoxidase. Data are reported on the reactivity of several MnPs towards
ClO– and ClO2–[35,92,93,94]. Indirect studies
indicate reactivity of MnTE-2-PyP5+ towards peroxyl and alkoxyl
radicals [77,95,96]. Studies are in progress to
broaden our insight into the reactivity of MnPs towards H2O2 and
other biologically relevant peroxides [97];
Araujo-Chaves et al. [98] reported glutathione
peroxidase-like activity of MnTM-4-PyP5+, while Gross's group
reported fair catalase-like activity of corroles [51]. Potent SOD mimics have metal-centered redox properties compatible with
cellular reductants such as ascorbate, glutathione and tetrahydrobiopterin. Due to the
high in vivo concentrations of those reductants, MnPs are likely coupled to these
molecules while redox cycling with reactive species. By removing reactive species, MnPs
can protect isocitrate dehydrogenase, therefore assuring regeneration of cellular
antioxidant defenses [99,100].
Fig. 6
The reactivity of MnPs towards reactive species is related to the electron deficiency
of the metal site characterized by
E/ (see fig. 3). The most potent Mn porphyrins have a very
electron-deficient metal site and thus favor binding of electron-donating anionic
species such as O2–·, ONOO–,
CO3–·, ClO–, etc. Further
due to the same fact they favor accepting electrons and being readily reduced with
cellular reductants; in a subsequent step (while being oxidized from MnIIP
to MnIIIP) MnIIP can reduce the reactive species. The cationic
character allows them to approach the anionic deprotonated cysteines of signaling
proteins and oxidize those while undergoing reduction. When oxidized to O =
MnIVP4+ (with ONOO–,
H2O2, ClO– or
CO3–·), in a subsequent step they readily
oxidize glutathione, ascorbate or uric acid and undergo reduction to
MnIIIP whereby closing the catalytic cycle. Adapted from Batinic-Haberle
et al. [7].
As already noted, the reactive species, usually viewed as ‘bad guys’, are
able to oxidize biological molecules, but at nanomolar levels are also essential for
cellular signaling. Their levels are tightly controlled by the abundance of cellular
endogenous antioxidants: small molecules such as ascorbate, tocopherols,
tetrahydrobiopterin and glutathione, and proteins such as the SOD family of enzymes,
catalases, peroxidases, peroxiredoxins, etc. Once their concentrations increase and
approach micromolar levels, the cell is oxidatively stressed; subsequently it either
upregulates antiapoptotic pathways, aiming at cell survival, or activates
proinflammatory pathways, eventually leading to cell death or cell transformation and
carcinogenesis. We have thus far reported that MnPs are able to prevent activation of
major transcription factors that control those processes: hypoxia-inducible factor-1
(HIF-1α), a major factor in carcinogenesis; NF-ĸB, a major antiapoptotic
factor (though it contains proapoptotic members of its family), and activator protein-1
(AP-1), which controls both cell proliferation and apoptosis (fig. 7) [6,9,10].
Fig. 7
The reactivity of Mn porphyrins towards transcription factors (a), and
suppression of postischemic NF-ĸB activation by
MnTDE-2-ImP5+ in a middle cerebral artery occlusion model of
stroke (b, c). a One week of
intracerebroventricular administration of Mn porphyrin starting at 90 min after the
onset of reperfusion (after 90-min middle cerebral artery occlusion) allows for a
significant decrease in infarct volume and neurological deficit even 8 weeks after
ischemia [106]. The efficacy was largely
attributed to the suppression of cellular transcriptional activity that would have
otherwise perpetuated the primary oxidative event. NF-ĸB activation was
measured 6 h after middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats treated
intracerebroventricularly with vehicle or 900 ng MnTDE-2-ImP5+ at
90 min after onset of reperfusion. ROS = reactive oxygen species; RNS = nitrogen
species; VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor; EGF = epidermal growth factor;
MCP = monocyte chemoattractant protein. b Representative electromobility
shift analysis. A = Probe with no sample; B = positive control (HeLa); C = positive
control with cold probe; D = contralateral hemisphere with p50 antibody
(MnTDE-2-ImP5+); E = contralateral hemisphere with p65 antibody
(MnTDE-2-ImP5+); F = ischemia hemisphere
(MnTDE-2-ImP5+); G = ischemia hemisphere (vehicle); H = ischemia
hemisphere (vehicle) with p50 antibody; I = ischemia hemisphere (vehicle) with p65
antibody. A substantially greater supershift was seen for p65 than p50 (here
indicated as NF-ĸB). c Open circles indicate relative optical
density values in individual rat NF-ĸB bands in the hemisphere ipsilateral to
middle cerebral artery occlusion. Horizontal bars indicate group mean values.
Originally, and based on the experimental evidence, the removal of reactive species by
MnPs was proposed as means to prevent the activation of HIF-1α, AP-1 and
NF-ĸB (fig. 7) [101,102,103,104,105]. However, very early on, in
a cell-free system, Piganelli's group suggested that
MnTE-2-PyP5+ likely oxidizes cysteine of the p50 NF-ĸB
subunit in the nucleus, which prevents the DNA binding of NF-ĸB and the related
transcriptional activity (fig. 7). The efficacy of
the imidazolium derivative MnTDE-2-ImP5+ in a stroke model was
attributed to a similar mechanism [106]. We have
subsequently shown the feasibility of such an event in an aqueous system where
MnTE-2-PyP5+ proton-dependently oxidized the cysteine residue in
glutathione [10]. Moreover, the compound indeed
reaches the nucleus and accumulates there at a 3-fold higher level than in the cytosol
of bone-marrow-derived macrophages [10]. Such
action of MnP likely plays a role in the prevention of excessive inflammation of islet
cells during isolation and significantly delayed or prevented animal death in young
nonobese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficient mice [101]; note that the effects observed were antioxidative, but are likely a
consequence of the MnP pro-oxidative action. The fact that
MnTE-2-PyP5+ oxidizes and reduces
O2–· in a dismutation process with similar rate
constants (equations 1 and 2) supports such in vivo findings where it indeed acts either
as anti- or pro-oxidant. Recently, Tome's group in a study on lymphoma cells
showed that, when combined with steroid dexamethasone, MnTE-2-PyP5+
glutathionylates cysteine of the p65 subunit of NF-ĸB in the presence of
H2O2 (levels of which were increased due to the action of
dexamethasone). Such a modification seems to occur in cytosol, and in turn prevents p65
DNA binding in the nucleus and NF-ĸB activation. In turn, it deprives cells of
their key endogenous antioxidant glutathione and therefore enhances the
anticancer/cytotoxic effect of steroids [107].
Whether cationic MnP oxidizes or glutathionylates the protein cysteine, electrostatics
plays a role when it approaches the deprotonated anionic cysteine. Both sets of
experiments caution us to distinguish between the nature of the actions of MnPs and the
nature of the effects we observe in vivo.To investigate the possibility that MnPs act as pro-oxidants in vivo, which results in
mild oxidative stress and signals the organism to employ its own endogenous
antioxidative defenses, we explored the MnP/ascorbate system [27]. The major reason behind such a strategy is that there are large
intracellular micromolar levels of ascorbate whose primary role is to recycle oxidized
tocopherol and thus assure its protective role in preventing lipid peroxidation. In a
simple aqueous ascorbate/MnP system, MnTE-2-PyP5+ catalyzes ascorbate
oxidation leading to the enhanced production of peroxide (fig. 8) [27]. Such a system could
produce mild oxidative stress and signal to the organism that it needs to upregulate its
own defense systems. Such an effect is also reminiscent of the effect of physical
exercising: as a mild oxidative event, exercise has been shown to upregulate endogenous
antioxidative defenses, including MnSOD [108].
Fig. 8
Mn porphyrin redox cycling with ascorbate will cause differential effects in cancer
and normal cells. Due to the high cellular levels of ascorbate, it is likely that
cationic Mn(III) N-alkylpyridylporphyrins will be reduced with ascorbate to
MnIIP within the cell, which will then act as a reductant, either
reacting with O2–· or ONOO– or
ClO– or H2O2 closing the catalytic cycle.
Due to the abundance of oxygen relative to the levels of other species,
MnIIP may prefer reducing O2 to
O2–· which will eventually dismute to
H2O2. The normal cell has the abundance of peroxide-removing
enzymes, thus the contribution of Fenton chemistry leading to a deleterious
–OH radical may be negligible [203,204,205,206,207,208,209,210,211]. Cancer cells
are frequently deprived of H2O2-removing enzymes, thus
excessive amounts of peroxide will be formed. In such a situation, coupling with
ascorbate involves O2 or O2–·
(catalytic in nature) and may produce pro-oxidative effects, and favor cancer cell
death as opposed to normal, nontransformed cells [9,27,148].
Depending upon the levels of ascorbate, MnP and the cellular redox status, such an
action may eventually lead to excessive H2O2 accumulation and in
turn cell death and could be employed in anticancer therapy (fig. 8). Of note, the cancer cell is under oxidative stress and thus
already has a perturbed balance between reactive species and antioxidant levels and a
different transcription status profile relative to normal cells [9,27]. A small change in the
levels of reactive species may thus be overwhelming and may signal the cancer cell to
undergo death. Thus, particularly in cancer, redox coupling of MnP with ascorbate
(exogenous or endogenous) may cause cancer cell death through increased peroxide
production (fig. 8). The nature of the in vivo
redox-based actions of MnP will depend upon the levels of reactive species, endogenous
antioxidants, levels of MnPs and their cellular distribution. It may be safe to say,
given their redox properties, that MnPs are potent biological catalysts of those redox
reactions that would have otherwise occurred but to a smaller extent. It is further safe
to say that kcat(O2–·) describes the
ability of Mn porphyrin to readily give and accept electrons, and thus to reduce and
oxidize substrates. The kcat(O2–·) is
therefore an excellent measure of MnP therapeutic potential.
Purity and Identity of Mn Porphyrin Preparations
Researchers need to be aware that the preparations they obtain may not be pure enough or
may contain impurities that could cause adverse effects or interfere with the active
ingredient. Data have already been provided on such cases related to commercial
preparations from Alexis, CalBiochem and Porphyrin Products [7,109]. Among such cases are
those where the insufficient purity of commercial preparations of
MnTE-2PyP5+ and MnTBAP3– resulted in failures of
those Mn porphyrins to perform in models with oxidative stress background [38,76,110]. Thus, prior to their use in biological
studies, the compounds should be tested on their activity with basic analytical tools
[76,109]. The impurities that may be present in preparations of MnPs relate to
incomplete quaternization of pyridyl nitrogens (differently quaternized compounds),
incomplete metallation (metal-free ligand) and incomplete removal of free manganese, and
may be assessed as described elsewhere [76,109,111].
Assignment of Type of Action to Mn Porphyrins and Related Compounds
Another problem that continuously appears in publications is incorrect assignment of the
function of Mn porphyrins and other types of antioxidants. Importantly, none of the
synthetic or natural compounds explored are specific to a particular reactive species
and cellular location. For many compounds, very limited data exist on their reactivity
and subcellular distribution. For example, a few years ago we clearly showed that
MnTBAP3– is not an SOD mimic [76,109]. However, researchers
continue to indicate that they have chosen for their research MnTBAP3–
due to its function as a SOD mimic. Its use authors have additionally justified by its
mitochondrial targeting [112], even though
insufficient data have thus far been provided on the mitochondrial localization of
MnTBAP3–. Based on the present knowledge that the drug needs to
have a cationic charge to enter mitochondria, the accumulation of the negatively charged
MnTBAP3– in mitochondria would be disfavored [9]. Neutral porphyrins such as EUK-418, AEOL11207 and
MnTCHP+ have been claimed to be either SOD mimics (EUK-418 [113] and AEOL11207 [90]) or potent ONOO– scavengers
(MnTCHP+[44] and Mn(III)
complex of bis(dihydroxyphenyl)dipyrromethene derivative [45]). The ONOO–-related potency of
MnTCHP+ and Mn(III) complex with bis(dihydroxyphenyl)dipyrromethene
derivative was evaluated based on the comparison to MnTM-4-PyP4+ (k =
4.3 × 106M−1s−1) [114] which is an inferior ONOO–
scavenger compared to the severalfold more potent ONOO– scavenger,
MnTM-2-PyP5+ (k = 1.85 ×
107M−1 s−1) [114]. (OH)FeTM-4-PyP4+ (commonly
indicated in the literature as FeTMPyP), FP15 and INO-4885 are declared as
ONOO– scavengers, while based on our data and the data of others,
they are likely much stronger catalysts of O2–·
dismutation than scavengers of ONOO–[115,116,117]. Indeed, (OH)FeTM-4-PyP4+ was the first
porphyrin-based SOD mimic ever tested by Pasternack and Halliwell [23]. To add to the existing confusion in the literature about
metalloporphyrins, a paper by Suofu et al. [118]
describes
FeT[2,4,6-Me3-3,5-(SO3)2-P]P7– as
‘FeTMPyP’, which is a common abbreviation for Fe(III)
meso-tetrakis(N-methylpyridinium-4-yl)porphyrin. The former is an anionic Fe porphyrin
and the latter a cationic compound [118]. The
latter is a commercially available Fe porphyrin, and perhaps the one used by the
authors. Another manuscript by Thiyagarajan et al. [119] has a confusing statement, listing MnTE-2-PyP5+,
M40403 and M40404 compounds as belonging to the same metalloporphyrin class of SOD
mimetics with neuroprotective effects in cerebral ischemia models. Yet, M40403 and
M40404 are Mn(II) cyclic polyamines; M40404 is an inactive analog of M40403 [7]. The papers listed above are only few among many
which indicate the potential of metalloporphyrins in treating oxidative stress injuries,
but introduce errors from therapeutic and mechanistic points of view.Finally, the justification for use of the wide-spectrum antioxidant tempol in vivo has
been based on its SOD activity [120,121]. However, at physiological pH, it is not an
SOD mimic, although it can be oxidized to oxoammonium cation with
ONOO–, and oxoammonium cation reacts rapidly with
O2–·, closing the catalytic cycle. Thus, tempol
may be considered as ONOO–/O2–·
oxidoreductase. It does, however, react with ONOO– and with
CO3–· and
·NO2– degradation products of the
ONOO– adduct with CO2[122,123,124,125]. Tempol has also
been shown to react with other strong oxidants such as protein-derived, peroxyl and
thiyl radicals [8].Such improper assignments obviously lead to incorrect interpretation of data obtained
from in vivo studies, and wrongly instruct future researchers what to use in their
studies; consequently, incorrect conclusions are being perpetuated.
Cancer
As the world population ages, the prevalence of cancer increases and is presently one of
the major causes of death worldwide. It is thus no wonder that there is a growing
interest in the development of anticancer drugs. Cancer is a disease with a staggering
complexity that continues to generate new avenues of research. There are more than 200
different tumor types, each with its own subtypes. To further complicate matters,
findings from animal models do not translate well to human subjects [126].Most anticancer drugs can be classified according to their mechanism of action, such as
DNA-interactive agents, antimetabolites, antitubulin agents, molecular targeting agents,
hormones, monoclonal antibodies and other biological agents. MnPs present an entirely
novel class of anticancer drugs: they are metal complexes whose redox potency is the
basis for their in vivo efficacy; rather than targeting a specific protein, they target
the cancer cell redox status which supports cancer cell metabolism and growth. MnPs can:
(a) act as single anticancer agents; (b) enhance radiochemotherapy and hyperthermia; (c)
offer radioprotection for normal tissue during cancer radiation therapy; (d) diminish
consequences of the effect of the ‘chemobrain’ (the term that describes
the brain-damaging effects of chemotherapeutics such as doxorubicin); (e) inhibit
chronic morphine tolerance and thus allow pain management; (f) prevent neuropathic pain
caused by anticancer chemotherapy, and (g) differentially image tumor versus normal
tissue. All of these actions that substantiate the therapeutic potential of Mn porphyrin
in cancer have thus far been reported by different laboratories for different cancer
types [27,82,102,103,105,107,127,128,129,130,131,132,133,134].
Mn Porphyrins as Single Agents
Their actions as single agents in breast, prostate, skin and brain animal tumor
models were investigated [63,103,105,131,132,133,135,136,137,138]. Except for skin cancer [105], thus far the antitumor effect has been moderate and is primarily
understood as being at the level of tumor vasculature, i.e. by inhibiting
HIF-1α activation and expression of its gene vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF), which is crucial for tumor growth [63,103,131,132,133,135,136,137,138].In a 4T1 breast cancer mouse model, MnTE-2-PyP5+
produced a moderate anticancer effect – tumor growth delay when given daily at
2 × 7.5 mg/kg s.c. for the duration of the study. HIF-1α and VEGF were
suppressed, as was hypoxia and consequently microvessel density and endothelial cell
proliferation. Oxidative stress was suppressed as measured by decreased levels of
nitrotyrosine, DNA oxidation, NADPH oxidase and macrophage infiltration [103].In an RM-9 mouse prostate model, MnTE-2-PyP5+
suppressed tumor growth in its own right only when it was injected immediately after
subcutaneous implantation of 5 × 105 RM-9 cells [139].In a mouse skin carcinogenesis study, the antitumor effect of
MnTE-2-PyP5+ as monotherapy was remarkable. Mouse skin was
treated with as low as 5 ng/day for 5 days per week for 14 weeks. Tumor was induced
with 7,12-dimethyl-benz-(a)-anthracene and promoted with
12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. MnTE-2-PyP5+ was applied
either 30 min before or 12 h after each 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate
treatment. MnP decreased the number of papillomas from 31 to 5, while MnSOD
overexpression decreased the number of papillomas from 19 to 9 [105,140]. The smaller
effect of MnSOD overexpression was due to the suppression of both cell apoptosis and
proliferation; however, MnP was given in a timely manner (after the peak of apoptosis
but before the peak of mitosis) and it thus suppressed proliferation only. In another
study, depilated mice were exposed to 5 kJ/m2 UVB irradiation [141]. MnTE-2-PyP5+, given at 5
mg/kg i.p. for 2 days before radiation protected mtDNA polymerase (a major
constituent of nucleoids, responsible for the replication and repair of the
mitochondrial genome). Oxidative damage (as measured by nitrotyrosine formation) was
decreased at 1 and 24 h after radiation [141]. This study suggests that MnP would protect skin against the
UVB-mediated development of skin cancer.
Brain Cancer
Two lipophilic Mn porphyrins were tested in a mouse brain tumor study on several
glioblastoma and medulloblastoma cell lines and exerted an anticancer effect [131]. A significant anticancer effect was found
in the presence of radiation, or temozolomide, or when combined both with radiation
and temozolomide [127,128]. Lam's group found in a cellular study that the
combination of MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+ with apoptotic gene and gap
junction inhibitor confers potency in the treatment of brain tumors [131].
Mn Porphyrins as Radiosensitizers
Mn porphyrins have been shown to radiosensitize tumors to radiation therapy [82,127,128]. It is known that
HIF-1α is activated as a consequence of increased levels of reactive species
formed by radiation [142]. Increased
HIF-1α activation and consequent upregulation of angiogenic proteins (VEGF and
basic fibroblast growth factor) outbalances to some extent the cytotoxic effect of
radiation [82]. Based on the existing
experimental evidence from a 4T1 mouse breast cancer study with subcutaneous
xenografts (fig. 9) [102], the radiosensitizing effect of
MnTE-2-PyP5+ has been attributed to the suppression of
HIF-1α and its VEGF gene activation, which in turn led to
suppression of angiogenesis (fig. 9). In a
Balb/c nu/nu mouse brain tumor study, both lipophilic compounds
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+ produced
similar radiosensitizing effects [127,128].
Fig. 9
Radiosensitizing effect of MnTE-2-PyP5+ on tumor growth and on the
tumor vasculature in a mouse 4T1 breast cancer study. a Sc xenograft
tumor growth delay: MnTE-2-PyP5+ was given before and after
radiation. Two regimes of dosing were employed where MnP was given either 1 h before
each radiation dose or at 1, 13 and 25 h after the 3rd dose of radiation. Three doses
of radiation were separated by 12 h. Tumors were allowed to reach approximately 200
mm3 in size, and randomized to 1 of 5 treatment groups on
postimplantation day 9: (1) phosphate-buffered saline (NT), (2)
MnTE-2-PyP5+ (6 mg/kg every 12 h/3), (3) radiation (RT; 5 Gy
every 12 h/3), (4) MnTE-2-PyP5+ + RT (1
MnTE-2-PyP5+ dose before each fraction of radiation), or (5) RT
+ MnTE-2-PyP5+(3 MnTE-2-PyP5+ doses after
the third fraction of radiation). The combined-treatment groups had significant,
supra-additive effects on radiation-induced tumor growth delay, irrespective of
sequencing. n = 5 per group. * p = 0.01 versus radiation
alone [82]. b, c 4T1
window chamber model: the radiosensitizing effect of MnTE-2-PyP5+
is at least in part related to the antiangiogenic action of
MnTE-2-PyP5+ as shown by the measurements of vascular density.
Amifostin has no effect on vascular density. 4T1 window chamber tumors were
randomized to treatment with radiation (RT) or sham-irradiation (NT) and
phosphate-buffered saline or MnTE-2-PyP5+ (b) or
phosphate-buffered saline or amifostine (WR-2721; c). A course of 3
fractions of radiation (5 Gy each, 12 h apart) was followed immediately by daily
administration of MnTE-2-PyP5+ (6 mg/kg/day) or amifostine (100
mg/kg/day) for 3 days. Tumors were imaged immediately after radiation (0 h) and every
day thereafter (24, 48 and 72 h), and these images were used to calculate the tumor
vascular length densities. Combined treatment with radiation and
MnTE-2-PyP5+ resulted in significant tumor devascularization
between 48 and 72 h after radiation. n = 5 per group. * p =
0.05 versus tumor vascular length density at 0 h. Error bars represent standard
deviations. Adapted from Moeller et al. [82].
MnTE-2-PyP5+ enhanced radiotherapy and showed a potential to
enhance the antitumor immune response: a high number of T lymphocytes, natural killer
cells in the spleen, B-cell counts in the blood and spleen, and increased IL-2 levels
were found in mice receiving MnP [132]. The
group receiving MnP plus radiation had reduced intratumoral HIF-1α and a
decreased capacity to secrete TNF-α, whereas production of IL-4 was increased
[135]. Moreover,
MnTE-2-PyP5+ decreased the risk of radiation-induced normal
tissue toxicity [133]. While the MnPs studied
may theoretically protect tumors as well as normal tissue during radiation, such an
effect, if present, has been insignificant [135] and has not diminished the cytotoxic effect of tumor radiation. Such
negligible radioprotection of tumors by MnP relative to normal tissue may result from
the differences between cancer and normal cells as a consequence of their
differential redox status and transcription profile.
Mn Porphyrins as Chemosensitizers
MnP + Temozolimide. It was further shown, with the brain
tumor cell line D-245 MG in a Balb/c nu/nu mouse subcutaneous tumor xenograft study,
that two cationic MnPs, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+, enhance temozolomide therapeutic efficiency
[127,128].MnP + Corticosteroid and MnP + Cyclophosphamide. In a
cellular lymphoma model, Tome's group showed that
MnTE-2-PyP5+ accelerated dexamethasone-induced apoptosis in
mouse thymic lymphoma cells WEHI7.2 and primary follicular lymphoma FL cells [130]. It also potentiated cyclophosphamide
toxicity while inhibiting lymphoma cell growth and attenuating doxorubicin toxicity
in H9c2 cardiomyocytes (immortalized clonal cell line derived from BDIX rat embryonic
heart tissue) [130]. The effects are related
to the inhibition of NF-ĸB activation by MnP as a consequence of MnP-driven
catalysis of glutathionylation of the p65 subunit of NF-ĸB with
H2O2 (produced by corticosteroid; see under
‘Mechanism of action of Mn porphyrins’) [107]. In an aqueous system, Fe and less so Mn porphyrins are
able to hydroxylate cyclophosphamide in the presence of ascorbate, acting as
cytochrome P450 mimics [26]. Due to the
accumulation of MnPs in tumors, the activation of the prodrug cyclophosphamide would
occur in situ in the tumor rather than in the liver.MnP + Ascorbate. Levine's group has pointed to the
remarkable anticancer potency of ascorbate given as a single agent either via the
intraperitoneal or intravenous route, but not orally [143,144,145,146]. The action was ascribed to the enhanced production of peroxide
catalyzed by endogenous metalloproteins [144]. Ascorbate was also tested in a combination with other redox-able agents
such as quinones; the combined treatment with menadione already has a clinical
application for the treatment of prostate cancer [147]. In cellular experiments with 5 different cancer cell lines,
MnTE-2-PyP5+ and MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ catalyzed
ascorbate oxidation leading to the production of cytotoxic peroxide; 30
µM MnP and 3 mM ascorbate were employed [27]. In an E. coli study, in
such a scenario, MnPs acting as pro- rather than antioxidants imparted oxidative
stress, which subsequently induced an adaptive response by upregulating endogenous
catalases and peroxidases so that the stressed cells grow as well as the nonstressed
cells [148]. A similar action may occur even
when MnP is administered as a single agent due to the high millimolar intracellular
levels of ascorbate. E. coli data clearly point to the fact that at
least one possible action of MnPs under certain in vivo conditions is an induction of
mild oxidative stress (similar to physical exercising), which provokes the
upregulation of endogenous antioxidative defenses. Subsequently, we observe
antioxidative effects. In a preliminary 4T1 mouse breast cancer study, conducted with
2 × 1 mg/kg/day of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (s.c.) and 2 × 2
g/kg ascorbate (i.p.), tumor growth delay was observed (not reaching statistical
significance). The effect can be due at least in part to the increased macrophage
infiltration and reduced macrovessel density [27]. More work is needed to identify appropriate concentrations of both
MnP and ascorbate in order to conduct an in vivo study with a significant therapeutic
outcome. This will further our insight into the type of action of SOD mimics in
vivo.
Mn Porphyrins as Enhancers of Hyperthermia
MnTE-2-PyP5+ largely potentiated hyperthermia [129]. Treatment of mice started 10 days after
tumor implantation (day 1). Heat was delivered at 41.5°C on days 1, 5 and 8.
MnTE-2-PyP5+ was delivered at 5 mg/kg twice per day to C57/BL6
mice carrying the B16F10 melanoma cell line, starting on day 1 until mice were
sacrificed on day 9. Nearly full suppression of melanoma growth was observed as a
result of this combinatorial treatment [129].
Mn Porphyrins as Cancer Imaging Agents
In a mouse prostate cancer study, Lascola's group [149] showed that contrast changes of
MnTE-2-PyP5+ are up to 6-fold greater in tumors than surrounding
noncancerous tissues, suggesting its potential as a novel diagnostic tool in
detecting prostate malignancy. In MRI experiments at 7 T, the phantom studies
revealed approximately 2-fold higher T1 relaxivity changes with MnPs than observed
with commercially available Gd chelates [149].
Radioprotection
Rectum Radioprotection
Radiation proctitis is a common adverse event associated with radiotherapy of tumors
in the pelvic region. Archambeau [150] has
shown that MnTE-2-PyP5+ decreases the severity of both acute and
chronic proctitis in rats irradiated with 20- to 30-Gy protons delivered to a 2.5-cm
segment of the rectum. MnP was given at 5 mg/kg s.c. either 1 h before or 1 h after
irradiation with additional drug administered at weekly intervals thereafter [150]. The study indicates that MnPs may be
useful as adjunctive agents for radiotherapy of pelvic tumors.
Pulmonary Radioprotection
In several rat studies both MnTE-2-PyP5+
(1–6 mg/kg/day) and MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (0.05–1
mg/kg/day) protected lungs from radiation when given daily for a 2-week period before
or as late as 8 weeks after irradiation [73,151,152]. In a preliminary nonhuman primate study,
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ protected lungs from radiation at a dose as low
as 0.05 mg/kg/day, given for 3 months starting 2 h after radiation [153]. The treatment with
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ delayed the onset of radiation-induced CT
abnormalities and decreased lung weight, inflammation, edema and epithelial
hyperplasia [153]. In a proteomic study,
treatment with MnTE-2-PyP5+ partially prevented the apparent
degradation of filamin and talin, reduced the level of cleaved caspases 3 and 9, and
promoted Akt phosphorylation as well as β-catenin expression after a single
dose of 28 Gy irradiation of the rat right hemithorax [154]. The imidazolium analog MnTDE-2-ImP5+ was
efficacious in a lung radioprotection model also [63,138].
Whole-Body Radioprotection
Mouse survival was increased by 80% when MnTM-2-PyP5+ was
delivered intraperitoneally for 2 weeks at 5 mg/kg prior to 8-Gy whole-body radiation
[155,156].
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Radioprotection
Treatment after whole-body radiation (WBR) with MnTE-2-PyP5+
significantly inhibited the increase in reactive oxygen species production and DNA
damage in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and the reduction in HSC frequency and
clonogenic function induced by WBR. It appears also that
MnTE-2-PyP5+ inhibited the induction of HSC senescence by WBR,
which was shown to occur via the p16 senescence pathway: MnP suppressed the
expression of p16Ink4a (p16) mRNA in HSCs induced by WBR and improved the long-term
and multilineage engraftment of irradiated HSCs after transplantation [157]. In another mouse study, Zhou's
group showed that reactive species produced by NADPH oxidase play a causal role in
the induction of hematopoietic genomic instability by ionizing radiation [158].
Eye Radioprotection
Protection of photoreceptors and retinal capillaries by 2.5 µM
MnTE-2-PyP5+ administered into the vitreous humor was observed
when the rat eye was exposed to 8- and 28-Gy proton radiation [136].Therapeutic effects of Mn porphyrins on cancer- and radiation-related injuries are
briefly summarized in table 2.
Table 2
T herapeutic effects of Mn porphyrins in cancer- and radiation-related injuries
Disease
Therapy
Treatment type
Porphyrins
Animal/cells
References
Cancer
monotherapy
skin
MnTE-2-PyP5+
mice
105
breast
MnTE-2-PyP5+
mice
103
combinatorial therapy
chemotherapy
MnTE-2-PyP5+
cells
27, 130, 127, 128, 131
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
mice
MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+
cells
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
cells
radiation
MnTE-2-PyP5+
mice
82, 102, 127, 128, 132, 133
chemotherapy + radiation
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
MnTnBuOE-2-PyP5+
hyperthermia
MnTE-2-PyP5+
195
Radiation injury
whole-body radioprotection
MnTE-2-PyP5+
zebrafish
155–158, 196
MnTM-2-PyP5+
mice
hematopoietic stemcell radioprotection
MnTE-2-PyP5+
lung radioprotection
MnTE-2-PyP5+
rats
63, 73, 138, 151, 152
MnTDE-2-ImP5+
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
nonhuman primates
153
eye radioprotection
MnTE-2-PyP5+
rats
136
GI tract − rectum
MnTE-2-PyP5+
rats
150
brain radioprotection
MnTDE-2-ImP5+
rats
137
cell radioprotection
EUK-451
cells
43, 110
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+
Listed are the formulas of Mn porphyrin, the diseases where the beneficial effects
were observed, the type of animal tested and the related references. GI =
Gastrointestinal.
Central Nervous System Diseases
The therapeutic effects of porphyrins on central nervous system-related
disorders/injuries are briefly summarized in table 3.
Table 3
Therapeutic effects of porphyrins in central nervous system (CNS)-related
disorders/injuries
Listed are the diseases where beneficial effects were observed, the Mn porphyrin
name, the animal tested and the related references.
Stroke
There is essentially no efficacious therapy available for the treatment of stroke.
The efficacy of 3 cationic Mn pyridyl and imidazolyl porphyrins
(MnTE-2-PyP5+, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+,
MnTDE-2-ImP5+) in several studies of a rodent model of middle
cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) suggests the remarkable potential of these compounds
[85,106,159,160]. In such models, ischemia/reperfusion was produced via
90-min MCAO. Reoxygenation at reperfusion leads to the increased levels of superoxide
and its progeny, and in turn increases oxidative stress. Increased levels of reactive
species subsequently upregulate inflammatory pathways via upregulation of NADPH
oxidases, NO synthase and cytokines, which perpetuate oxidative stress, which in turn
results in irreversible damage and/or cell death. In MCAO studies we have shown that
Mn porphyrins are efficacious if given as a single bolus injection 60 min before
ischemia, and either 5 min or 90 min or 6 h (but not at 12 h) after MCAO. The
compounds were given to rats either intracerebroventricularly, intravenously or
subcutaneously. When given intracerebroventricularly at 5 min or 90 min after MCAO,
MnTE-2-PyP5+ decreased infarct size by 70–77%. The
infarct size was decreased by 54% if given 6 h after MCAO [160]. Neurological effects were measured on day
7 after MCAO and oxidative stress markers 4 h after MCAO. Protection was observed in
both cortex and caudoputamen, with no effect on body temperature. The imidazolium
analog MnTDE-2-ImP5+ was also efficacious [160]. For a single injection of Mn porphyrin, the protective
effects were primarily related to the initial oxidative damage, but not to the
secondary/continuous oxidative stress. No reduction of infarct volume was detected
several weeks after MCAO. However, when MnTDE-2-ImP5+ was given to
rats intracerebroventricularly at 900 ng bolus dose and 56 ng/h for a week (via
intravenous pumps) – starting at 90 min after 90-min MCAO, the efficacy was
still present at 8 weeks after MCAO [160].
Suppression of NF-ĸB activation was observed, indicating an effect of MnP on
signaling pathways (fig. 7). Recently, the more
lipophilic analog MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ was tested. It was given to rats
intravenously at 5 min or 6 h after MCAO at 225 µg/kg bolus dose and continued
with 225 µg/kg s.c. twice daily. Neurological function, measured on day 7, was
improved and total infarct size (fig. 10) was
decreased with either treatment. The NF-ĸB activity (6 h after MCAO) and the
expression of TNF-α and IL-6 (24 h after MCAO) were attenuated [85]. After bolus injection of 75 µg/kg
i.v. followed by 7 days of twice injections of 225 µg/kg s.c.,
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ accumulated in the brain to approximately 30
ng/mg tissue which level correlates with a remarkable drug efficacy. Given
Mr = 1,189, the 30 ng/mg tissue relates to approximately 25 nM
in fig. 10. At that time point, levels in
plasma are only twice as high, about 59 ng/ml (approx. 50 nM on the plot in
fig. 10) [85].
Fig. 10
The effect of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ in a rodent MCAO model of stroke on
day 7 after injury. Rats were subjected to 90 min of MCAO. Six hours after
reperfusion onset, they were treated with bolus intra-arterial 0.3 ml
phosphate-buffered saline (vehicle) or 225 µg/kg
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+. The same dose was then given subcutaneously and
continued twice daily as subcutaneous injections for 7 days, after which neurological
function was assessed. Open circles indicate individual animal values. Horizontal
lines indicate group median values. 0 = No neurological deficit. The neurological
score was improved in the MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ treatment group (p =
0.04). MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ decreased infarct volume in the cortex (p =
0.01), which was reflected in a 37% reduction in total infarct volume (p =
0.03). Infarct size was not changed in the subcortex (p = 0.58). Both TNF-α
and IL-6 concentrations were decreased by MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (*
p < 0.05). Pharmacokinetic studies were performed in order to assess the
concentration of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+, both in plasma and brain, that
corresponds to the beneficial therapeutic outcome. Adapted from Sheng et al. [85].
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ proved efficacious in a mouse subarachnoid
hemorrhage model. Mice underwent perforation of an anterior cerebral artery and were
treated with MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ for 4 days at 225 µg/kg i.p.
twice daily. Treatment improved their neurological score and increased diameters of
internal carotid, middle and anterior cerebral arteries ipsilateral to the anterior
cerebral artery perforation [85]. No
differences in basilar artery diameter indicated similar perfusion conditions between
groups during vessel casting. There was no effect of MnP on mean arterial
pressure.
Cerebral Palsy
In a rabbit model, MnTE-2-PyP5+ (12 mg/kg) and
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (at 0.12 and 1.2 mg/kg) were given to a dam at
30 min before and 30 min after 40-min ischemia (fig. 11). The hydrophilic MnTE-2-PyP5+, although given at up
to 100-fold higher doses, was ineffective, while approximately 4 orders of magnitude
more lipophilic compound, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+, was effective at both
doses in decreasing significantly postnatal motor deficits. However, when the MnP was
given after ischemia, and during perfusion only, it did not reach the brain fast
enough (its tmax determined by MRI was 2 h), and the beneficial effect was
negligible [161]. Under the same conditions,
a combination of ascorbate and trolox (100 mg/kg trolox – a derivative of
vitamin E and 1,600 mg/kg ascorbate) was protective.
Fig. 11
The rabbit cerebral palsy model. MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ was used at 2
doses, 0.12 and 1.2 mg/kg. The higher dose indicated slight toxicity and suggested
that it outbalanced somewhat the benefit of drug. Drug was given intravenously 30 min
before and 30 min after 40-min ischemia in two 30-ml volumes (total 60 ml per rabbit
dam). The ability of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ to cross several membranes
(uterus, placenta, fetus and fetal brain) and enter mitochondria likely contributed
to its efficacy. Adapted from Drobyshevsky et al. [161].
Spinal Cord Injury
The generation of reactive oxygen/nitrogen species is an early event following acute
mechanical injury; hence the development of antioxidant therapeutic strategies has
been considered a promising neuroprotective approach in a combinatorial treatment
regimen [162,163,164]. Sheng et al. [165] have studied the effect of a catalytic
antioxidant, MnTDE-2-ImP5+, in a mouse spinal cord injury model.
The compound offered protection when given intrathecally at a single 2.5 and 5
µg/kg dose at 60 min after the spinal cord compression [165]. The total damage score and rotarod performance were
improved on days 3, 7, 14 and 21 after spinal cord compression. However, the effect
did not reach statistical significance when the compound was given intravenously,
suggesting that bioavailability is critical in defining efficacy. With single
intravenous dosing at 4 and 8 mg/kg 15 min after injury,
MnTE-2-PyP5+ was marginally efficacious and thus shows promise
at continuous multiple dosing. Indeed, the most recent data show remarkable efficacy
of MnTE-2-PyP5+ given for a week at 1 mg/kg s.c. [Floyd et al.,
unpubl.]. Given the remarkable efficacy of a more lipophilic analog
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ in a stroke model, its application in spinal
cord injury is promising.The WW-85 [Fe(III) meso-tetrakis(N-[carboxylatobenzyl]pyridyl)porphyrin] given at
0.43 mg/kg i.p. at 1 h after trauma decreased inflammation, nitrotyrosine formation,
proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, poly-ADP-ribose polymerase
activation, NF-ĸB activation) and apoptosis and significantly ameliorated
recovery of limb function [166]. Genovese et
al. [167] studied the effect of iron
porphyrin, FeTSPP3– [Fe(III)
meso-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin] in a mouse spinal cord injury model.
FeTSPP3– treatment (10–100 mg/kg, i.p.) decreased the
spinal cord inflammation and tissue injury, neutrophil infiltration, nitrotyrosine
formation, poly-ADP-ribose polymerase activation, proinflammatory cytokine
expression, NF-ĸB activation and apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner at 1 and
4 h after the spinal cord injury. Furthermore, FeTSPP3– ameliorated
recovery of limb function (evaluated by motor recovery score) [167].The metalloporphyrin MnTBAP3– [Mn(III) meso-tetrakis
(4-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin] has also been tested in a rat spinal cord injury model by
Hachmeister et al. [168]. Intrathecal
pretreatment 30 min before spinal cord injury with 1 mg/kg MnTBAP3–
or 4-hour treatment after spinal cord injury with 2.5 mg/kg
MnTBAP3– decreased membrane lipid peroxidation and protein
nitration, and increased the number of surviving neurons compared to vehicle controls
[168]. In another study,
MnTBAP3– was able to partially prevent neuronal loss and
apoptosis [169]. When given at 10 and 50
mg/kg i.p., it significantly reduced neuronal death in the sections 1–2.5 mm
rostral and 1 mm caudal from the epicenter compared with that in the vehicle-treated
group [169]. The therapeutic impact of neural
stem cells was studied by Yu et al. [170].
During spinal cord injury, the inflammation caused a loss of donor human neural stem
cell (hNSC) graft and killed host neurons. The authors studied the protective effect
of polylactic coglycolic acid film embedded with MnTBAP3– on the
hNSCs [170]. The film was inserted into
either T7–8 or L2–3 to cover the ventral side of
the implanted porous polylactic coglycolic acid scaffold seeded with hNSCs. The
authors showed that ONOO–-triggered protein nitration and the
activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, cytochrome c release, and
caspases are involved in the elimination of NSC grafts and killing host neurons.
MnTBAP3– markedly protected hNSCs. Caution needs to be exercised
regarding the identity and mechanism of action of MnTBAP3– (see
under ‘Purity and identity and assignment of type of action of Mn
porphyrins’).
Chronic Morphine Tolerance
Chronic morphine use eventually ceases to provide an analgesic effect. This is known
as chronic morphine tolerance and is ascribed to the oxidative damage of MnSOD and of
critical proteins involved in neurotransmission: glutamate transferase and glutamine
synthase [171]. The effects of MnPs have been
studied in a mouse model of morphine tolerance [172]. At the doses studied, MnTE-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ did not exert independent analgesic effects;
neither drug was efficacious in acutely reversing the established morphine tolerance.
However, if given chronically with morphine, both MnPs inhibited the development of
morphine tolerance and expression of inflammatory cytokines in the spinal cord dorsal
horn [172]. Morphine tolerance was also
associated with the inactivation of the critical endogenous enzyme MnSOD (via protein
tyrosine nitration), but not Cu,ZnSOD and increased poly-ADP-ribose polymerase
activity and 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine formation in both brain and spinal cord
[171]. Mn porphyrins suppressed these
responses [172].
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ was 30-fold more potent (0.1 mg/kg) than
MnTE-2-PyP5+ (3 mg/kg), consistent with its greater
lipophilicity.
Neuropathic Pain
Anticancer drugs such as vincristine, paclitaxel, oxaliplatin, cisplatin and
bortezomib exert direct and indirect effects on sensory nerves to induce pain, which
results in suffering and limits treatment. Different mechanisms are involved in the
development of neuropathic pain and involve inflammation and oxidative stress [173]. Most recently Patti et al. [174] pointed to the N,N-dimethylsphingosine as a
key cause of neuropathic pain arising from the sphingomyelin/ceramide pathway.
Reactive species have been implicated in the ceramide pathway [175,176]. Inhibitors of
methyltransferase or ceramidase have been suggested as possible therapeutic
strategies. The mediation of the redox-based pathways may be a valid approach also
[174,175,176]. Rats with an
experimental painful peripheral neuropathy (the chronic constriction injury of the
sciatic nerve model) display heat-evoked hyperalgesia [120]. Chronic constriction injury is a standard model used to
screen novel nonnarcotic agents in chronic neuropathic pain. The effect of the
nitroxide tempol, a scavenger of a wide range of reactive species [8], on the attenuation of neuropathic pain was
reported [120,177]. Rausaria et al. [44] tested Mn(III) tetracyclohexenylporphyrin (MnTCHP+,
SR16) and MnTE-2-PyP5+ in a neuropathic pain model, where these
compounds dose-dependently reversed mechanoallodynia.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Crow's group has successfully tested anionic Fe porphyrin, FeTBAP3-
in a G93A amyotrophic lateral sclerosis mouse model [178]. When given at 1 mg/kg/day, either starting at 40 days of age or at
the onset of symptoms (with 2 mg/kg on the first day), FeTBAP3- extended
the survival interval by 1.55-fold. In a subsequent study, a more potent Mn porphyrin
SOD mimic and redox modulator, MnTDE-2-ImP5+, was tested at 2.5
mg/kg delivered from onset of neurological deficit to death; the survival interval
was increased 3-fold relative to FeTBAP3-.Equally potent but more lipophilic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ (given at
0.1–0.3 mg/kg i.p., fig. 12) was 5- to
10-fold more efficacious than MnTDE-2-ImP5+ and displayed a similar
efficacy to gadolinium texaphyrin. With the Gd complex, production of reactive
species was proposed as a major mode of action [179]. At present, an antioxidant action has been predominantly assigned to
MnTnHex-2-PyP5+; however, our most recent data suggest that this
MnP may also produce reactive species in vivo (see under ‘Mechanism of
action’).
Fig. 12
The effect of MnP in the G93A amyotrophic lateral sclerosis mouse model. The effect
of 0.3 mg/kg/day of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ on the survival
(a) and motor neuron preservation (b) when delivered
intraperitoneally from the onset of disease until death. Adapted from Crow [179].
Parkinson's Disease
Golden and Patel [180] have successfully
employed Mn porphyrins in cellular and animal models of Parkinson's
disease.
Epilepsy
Patel's group studied the role of oxidative stress in epilepsy resulting from
mitochondrial dysfunction using cross-bred mutant mice lacking MnSOD and employed the
metalloporphyrin antioxidant AEOL11207 (fig. 1).
At 5 mg/kg s.c. given daily (starting at 5 days of age for the duration of the study)
AEOL11207-treated Sod2
mice showed a significant decrease in both the frequency and duration of spontaneous
seizures, although seizure severity was not affected. Notably, the average lifespan
of AEOL11207-treated
Sod2 mice was
increased compared to vehicle-treated
Sod2 mice [181].
Alzheimer's Disease
St. Clair's group has shown that MnTE-2-PyP5+ at 0.1 and 1
ng/ml protected developing neurons against β-amyloid-induced neuronal death
and improved mitochondrial respiration [182].
Neurons were obtained from a homozygous mouse that incorporates the humanized
Alzheimer's disease (AD) mutation
(APP ×
PS-1), and therefore
stimulates natural progression of β-amyloid pathology observed in AD patients
[182].
Oxygen and Glucose Deprivation of Mixed Neuronal/Glial Cortical Cells and
Organotypic Hippocampal Slices
In a cellular study, MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and
MnTnOct-2-PyP5+ were able to protect neurons from oxygen/glucose
deprivation more than hydrophilic compounds; MnTnOct-2-PyP5+ was
effective at a >3 orders of magnitude lower concentration (0.01
µM) than MnTE-2-PyP5+[183].
Diabetes
MnTE-2-PyP5+ and MnTDE-2-ImP5+ are prospective
agents in diabetes-related disorders. MnTE-2-PyP5+ significantly
delayed or prevented the death of young nonobese diabetic-severe combined
immunodeficient mice when a rapid onset of diabetes was induced with a diabetogenic
T-cell clone (BDC-2.5) [184]. Soaking of
islet cells in 34 µM solution of MnTE-2-PyP5+
increased their survival upon isolation: levels of proinflammatory cytokines IL-6 and
IL-8 and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 were greatly suppressed and islets gained
the capacity to normalize diabetic recipient mice [185]. In streptozotocin-diabetic rats, MnTM-2-PyP5+
suppressed oxidative stress, decreased mortality and extended lifespan. In part such
data are explained by the ability of MnP to protect isocitrate dehydrogenase, a
source for NADPH-driven regeneration of endogenous antioxidative defenses [99,186].
The data on diabetes are summarized in Batinic-Haberle et al. [7,8].
Toxicity
While allowing for a wide therapeutic window, Mn porphyrins exert toxicity at higher
doses. A limiting acute toxicity is related to blood pressure drop, if administered via
the intraperitoneal or intravenous route [187].
Our preliminary data showed that shorter alkyl chain analogs, such as
MnTM-2-PyP5+ and MnTE-2-PyP5+, exert a much
smaller blood pressure drop than longer alkyl chain analogs. The more lipophilic analogs
seem to be more toxic, which have been so far related to increased lipophilicity and
thus increased cellular accumulation. Some other effects may possibly be involved. We
have done a detailed mouse toxicity study of MnTnHex-2-PyP5+.
Observations, weight measurements and morphopathological studies were performed on the
following organs: salivary glands, skin, skeletal muscles, larynx, lymph nodes; lungs,
heart, trachea, esophagus, bone marrow, bones; liver, spleen; pancreas, small intestine,
stomach; colon, cecum, small intestine, kidneys, urinary bladder, adrenal, uterus,
colon, oviduct, ovary; brain; eye and adnexae. MnP was delivered for a month twice daily
subcutaneously at a total daily dose of 0.2–5 mg/kg. The drug caused skin (mild
inflammation) and brain (acute degeneration of hippocampal neurons) toxicity at 1, 3 and
5 mg/kg/day. A coloration of liver Kupfer cells was also observed. No toxicity was
observed when the MnP was given at 0.2 and 0.5 mg/kg/day doses. Preliminary data showed
that when the mice were left without the drug for another month after a month of
0.2–5 mg/kg/day injections, these toxic effects disappeared.
Conclusions and Future Directions
Cationic, water-soluble Mn porphyrins are potential therapeutics for the treatment of
different diseases that have oxidative stress in common as a mechanism of injury. Herein
we summarized their effects in cancer (in particular in combination with radiation and
chemotherapy) and in central nervous system injuries, because these are conditions where
drugs are needed. Both cancer and stroke are prevalent pathological conditions and will
become even more prevalent as the world population ages. The efficacy of those
compounds, reported from several independent groups, is obvious and substantial and is
in part related to their ability to accumulate in critical cellular compartments
(mitochondria and nucleus), cross the blood-brain barrier, effectively scavenge reactive
species, and couple with cellular reductants and cellular signaling proteins. Many
factors involved in the actions of Mn porphyrins in vivo complicate the understanding of
the mechanistic aspects of therapeutic effects: (1) numerous reactive species involved;
(2) signaling proteins whose redox-active amino acids, such as cysteine, couple with
MnPs; (3) reductants involved in the redox coupling with MnPs such as ascorbate,
glutathione, tetrahydrobiopterin and uric acid; (4) multiple oxidation states of MnPs
involved, and (5) different subcellular compartmentalization. Thus, more work is needed
to fully comprehend the nature of the beneficial effects of Mn porphyrins which we
routinely observe. For that purpose additional analogs have been synthesized, including
Fe porphyrins. Also, future work will concentrate on the development of less toxic
analogs. The good manufacturing practice campaign is in progress to obtain
investigational new drug approval from the Food and Drug Administration and initialize
clinical trials for several MnPs.
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