| Literature DB >> 32314774 |
Cong Liu1, Xicheng Liu1, Xingxing Ge1, Qinghui Wang1, Lei Zhang1, Wenjing Shang1, Yue Zhang1, Xiang Ai Yuan1, Laijin Tian1, Zhe Liu1, Jinmao You1.
Abstract
Six fluorescent half-sandwich iridium(iii) coumarin-salicylaldehyde Schiff base (O^N) compounds ([(η5-Cp*)Ir(O^N)Cl]) were prepared and characterized. The introduction of a coumarin unit increased the antitumor activity (IC50: 9.9 ± 0.1 μM-40.7 ± 12.9 μM) of these compounds, the best of which was nearly two times that of clinical cisplatin. The results of laser confocal microscopy demonstrated that these compounds possessed an energy-dependent cellular uptake mechanism, accumulated in the lysosomes (Pearson co-localization coefficient: ∼0.7), damaged the integrity of the lysosomes, and induced apoptosis. The compounds could also decrease the mitochondrial membrane potential, catalyze the oxidation of the coenzyme (nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide) and improve the levels of the intracellular reactive oxygen species, following an antitumor mechanism of oxidation. Additionally, these compounds could block the metastasis of tumor cells. Above all, these iridium(iii) compounds show potential as antitumor agents with dual functions: lysosomal damage and anti-metastasis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32314774 DOI: 10.1039/d0dt00627k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dalton Trans ISSN: 1477-9226 Impact factor: 4.390