| Literature DB >> 28424538 |
Umar Ndagi1, Ndumiso Mhlongo1, Mahmoud E Soliman1.
Abstract
In the past, metal-based compounds were widely used in the treatment of disease conditions, but the lack of clear distinction between the therapeutic and toxic doses was a major challenge. With the discovery of cisplatin by Barnett Rosenberg in 1960, a milestone in the history of metal-based compounds used in the treatment of cancers was witnessed. This forms the foundation for the modern era of the metal-based anticancer drugs. Platinum drugs, such as cisplatin, carboplatin and oxaliplatin, are the mainstay of the metal-based compounds in the treatment of cancer, but the delay in the therapeutic accomplishment of other metal-based compounds hampered the progress of research in this field. Recently, however, there has been an upsurge of activities relying on the structural information, aimed at improving and developing other forms of metal-based compounds and nonclassical platinum complexes whose mechanism of action is distinct from known drugs such as cisplatin. In line with this, many more metal-based compounds have been synthesized by redesigning the existing chemical structure through ligand substitution or building the entire new compound with enhanced safety and cytotoxic profile. However, because of increased emphasis on the clinical relevance of metal-based complexes, a few of these drugs are currently on clinical trial and many more are awaiting ethical approval to join the trial. In this review, we seek to give an overview of previous reviews on the cytotoxic effect of metal-based complexes while focusing more on newly designed metal-based complexes and their cytotoxic effect on the cancer cell lines, as well as on new approach to metal-based drug design and molecular target in cancer therapy. We are optimistic that the concept of selective targeting remains the hope of the future in developing therapeutics that would selectively target cancer cells and leave healthy cells unharmed.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; apoptosis; cancer; metal complexes; platinum; selective target
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28424538 PMCID: PMC5344412 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S119488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
An update on the anticancer activities of metal-based complexes (2010–2016)
| Metal complexes | Molecular formula | Proposed mechanism of action | Target enzymes/cell lines/therapeutic indications | IC50 range (µM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Novel gold(I) and gold(III) NHC complexes | C52H44Au2N12P2F12 | Induction of apoptosis | TrxR | |
| Caffeine-based gold(1) NHCs | [Au(Caffeine-2-yielding)2] | Inhibition of protein | DNA | 0.54–28.4 (A2780) |
| Ester- and amide-functionalized imidazole of NHC complexes | {[ImA]AgCl} | Inhibition of tyrosine by gold(I) NHC ligands, thereby targeting TrxR | TrxR | |
| Novel Ru(II) NHCs | [(η6-p-cymene)2Ru2(Cl2)2] NHC | Mimic iron | DNA as target | 13–500 (Caki-1) |
| Caffeine-derived rhodium(I) NHC complexes | [Rh(I)Cl(COD)(NHC)] complexes | Inhibition of TrxR | TrXR | 84 (HepG2) |
| NHC–amine Pt(II) complexes | NHC (PtX2)–amine complexes | Nuclear DNA platination | Target DNA | 2.5 (KB3-1) |
| 2-Hydroxy-3-[(hydroxyimino)-4-oxopentan-2-ylidene] benzohydrazide derivatives | [(HL)Cu(OAc)(H2O)2]·H2O | Bind to DNA | Target DNA | 2.24–6.49 (HepG2) |
| Molybdenum(II) allyl dicarbonate complexes | [Mo(allyl)(CO)2(N-N)(py)]PF6 | DNA fragmentation | Target DNA | 1.8–13 (NALM-6) |
| Ru(II)–arene complex | [(η6-arene)Ru(II)(en)Cl]+ | DNA damage | Target DNA | |
| Novel ruthenium–arene pyridinyl methylene complexes | [(η6-p-cymene)RuCl (pyridinylmethylene)] | DNA binding | Target DNA | 07.76–25.42 (MCF7) |
| Multi-targeted organometallic Ru(II)–arene | [(η6-p-cymene)RuCl2]2-PARP and PARP-1 inhibitors | DNA binding | Target DNA | 85.1–500 (A549) |
| Ru(II)–arene complexes with 2-aryldiazole ligands | [(η6-arene)RuX(k2-N,N-L)]Y | DNA binding | Target DNA | 11–300 (A2780) |
| Osmiun(II)–arene carbohydrate base anticancer compound | Osmium(II)-bis [dichloride(η6-p-cymene)] | DNA binding | Target DNA | 50–746 (CH1) |
| Ru(II)–arene complexes with carbosilane metallodendrimers | Gn-[NH2Ru(η6-p-cymene)Cl2]m | Interaction with DNA | Target DNA | 6.3–89 (HeLa) |
| Ru(II) complexes with aroylhydrazone ligand | [Ru(η6-C6H6)Cl(L)] | Induction of apoptosis | Target DNA | 10.9–15.8 (MCF7) |
| Iridium(III) complexes with 2-phenylpyridine ligand | [(η5-Cp*)Ir(2-(R′-phenyl)-R-pyridine)Cl] | Interaction with DNA nucleobases | Target DNA | 1.18–60 (A2780) |
| New iron(II) cyclopentadienyl derivative complexes | [Fe(η5-C5H5)(dppe)L][X] | Interaction with DNA | Target DNA | 0.67–5.89 (HL-60) |
| Ru(II) cyclopentadienyl complexes with carbohydrate ligand | [Ru(η5-C5H5)(PP)(L)][X] | Induction of apoptosis | HCT116CC, HeLa | 0.45 (HCT116CC) |
| Ru(II) cyclopentadienyl complexes with phosphane co-ligand | [Ru(η5-C5H5)(PP)(L)][X] | Induction of apoptosis | HeLa | 2.63 (HeLa) |
| Organoiridium cyclopentadienyl complexes | [(η5-Cpx)Ir(L^L′)Z] | Intercalation of DNA | HeLa | 0.23 (HeLa) |
Abbreviations: IC50, half maximal inhibitory concentration; NHC, N-heterocyclic carbene; TrxR, thioredoxin reductase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; PARP-1, Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1; CDK1, cyclin-dependent kinase 1; HSA, human serum albumin; ADP, adenosine diphosphate.
Figure 1Evolution of organometallic complexes in cancer therapy.
Abbreviation: FDA, US Food and Drug Administration.
Summary of metal-based compounds undergoing clinical trials in human
| Drug name | Developers | Phase of clinical trial | Indications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Picoplatin | Pionard | Phase II | Treatment of colorectal cancer |
| Lipoplatin™ (Nanoplatin™, Oncoplatin) | Regulon | Phase II | Treatment of locally advanced gastric cancer/squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck |
| ProLindac™ (AP5046) | Access Pharm | Phase I, II and III trials | Advanced ovarian cancer |
| Satraplatin (JM216) | Spectrum Pharm and Agennix AG | Phase I, II and III trials | Treatment of colorectal cancer in combination with 5-FU and leucovorin, |
| NAMIA-A | – | Phase I | Metastatic tumor (lung, colorecta, melanoma, ovarian and pancreatic) |
| KP1019 | – | Phase II | Advanced colorecta cancer |
| 64Cu-ATSM | – | Phase II | PET/CT monitoring therapeutic progress in patient with cervica |
Abbreviations: FU, fluorouracil; NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; 64Cu-ATSM, 64Cu-diacetyl-bis(N4-methylthiosemicarbazone); PET, positron emission tomography; CT, computed tomography.
Figure 2Sugar-conjugated triazole ligands.
Notes: AcGlc-pyta (conjugate a) R = Ac. Glc-pyta (conjugate b) R = H.
Figure 3Structure of phenanthriplatin.
Figure 4Structure of platinum(IV) complexes under investigation: (A) [PtCl4(bipy)], (B) [PtCl4(dach)] and (C) cis-[PtCl2(NH3)2].
Figure 5The structure of KP1019 (A) and NAMI-A (B).
Abbreviation: DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide.
Figure 6RAPTA-C (A) and RAPTA-T (B).
Figure 7A 3D structure of the TrxR reductase homodimer (PDB entry 2J3N), with two chains in green and purple.
Note: The active site residues CYS 59.B, CYS 64.B, HIS 472.A and GLU 477.A represent the possible binding site for the gold(III) compounds.
Abbreviations: TrxR, thioredoxin reductase; PDB, Protein Data Bank; CYS, cysteine; HIS, histidine; GLU, glutamate.
Figure 8A and B are silver complexes with 2,6-disubstituted pyridine ligands.