Back to Search Start Over

Combination of chemotherapy and oxidative stress to enhance cancer cell apoptosis

Authors :
Jin Li
Song Wang
Xinming Li
Jintao Zhao
Jianguo Fang
Yanan Hou
Source :
Chemical Science
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2020.

Abstract

Cancer cells are vulnerable to reactive oxygen species (ROS) due to their abnormal redox environment. Accordingly, combination of chemotherapy and oxidative stress has gained increasing interest for the treatment of cancer. We report a novel seleno-prodrug of gemcitabine (Gem), Se–Gem, and evaluated its activation and biological effects in cancer cells. Se–Gem was prepared by introducing a 1,2-diselenolane (a five-membered cyclic diselenide) moiety into the parent drug Gemvia a carbamate linker. Se–Gem is preferably activated by glutathione (GSH) and displays a remarkably higher potency than Gem (up to a 6-fold increase) to a panel of cancer cell lines. The activation of Se–Gem by GSH releases Gem and a seleno-intermediate nearly quantitatively. Unlike the most ignored side products in prodrug activation, the seleno-intermediate further catalyzes a conversion of GSH and oxygen to GSSG (oxidized GSH) and ROS via redox cycling reactions. Thus Se–Gem may be considered as a suicide agent to deplete GSH and works by a combination of chemotherapy and oxidative stress. This is the first case that employs a cyclic diselenide in prodrug design, and the success of Se–Gem as well as its well-defined action mechanism demonstrates that the 1,2-diselenolane moiety may serve as a general scaffold to advance constructing novel therapeutic molecules with improved potency via a combination of chemotherapy and oxidative stress.<br />The 1,2-diselenolane unit is a general scaffold to construct glutathione-dependent prodrugs that show increased potency to cancer cells, and work via a combination of chemotherapy and oxidative stress.

Details

ISSN :
20416539 and 20416520
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemical Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....197681e93a1c94ba6cb628c9ee6194c0