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Activity and electrochemical properties: iron complexes of the anticancer drug triapine and its analogs.

Authors :
Plamthottam, Sheba
Plamthottam, Sheba
Sun, Daniel
Van Valkenburgh, Juno
Valenzuela, Jeffrey
Ruehle, Bastian
Steele, Dalton
Poddar, Soumya
Marshalik, Maxim
Hernandez, Selena
Radu, Caius Gabriel
Zink, Jeffrey I
Plamthottam, Sheba
Plamthottam, Sheba
Sun, Daniel
Van Valkenburgh, Juno
Valenzuela, Jeffrey
Ruehle, Bastian
Steele, Dalton
Poddar, Soumya
Marshalik, Maxim
Hernandez, Selena
Radu, Caius Gabriel
Zink, Jeffrey I
Source :
Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry; vol 24, iss 5, 621-632; 0949-8257
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Triapine (3-AP), is an iron-binding ligand and anticancer drug that is an inhibitor of human ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). Inhibition of RNR by 3-AP results in the depletion of dNTP precursors of DNA, thereby selectively starving fast-replicating cancer cells of nucleotides for survival. The redox-active form of 3-AP directly responsible for inhibition of RNR is the Fe(II)(3-AP)2 complex. In this work, we synthesize 12 analogs of 3-AP, test their inhibition of RNR in vitro, and study the electronic properties of their iron complexes. The reduction and oxidation events of 3-AP iron complexes that are crucial for the inhibition of RNR are modeled with solution studies. We monitor the pH necessary to induce reduction in iron complexes of 3-AP analogs in a reducing environment, as well as the kinetics of oxidation in an oxidizing environment. The oxidation state of the complex is monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy. Isoquinoline analogs of 3-AP favor the maintenance of the biologically active reduced complex and possess oxidation kinetics that allow redox cycling, consistent with their effective inhibition of RNR seen in our in vitro experiments. In contrast, methylation on the thiosemicarbazone secondary amine moiety of 3-AP produces analogs that form iron complexes with much higher redox potentials, that do not redox cycle, and are inactive against RNR in vitro. The catalytic subunit of human Ribonucleotide Reductase (RNR), contains a tyrosyl radical in the enzyme active site. Fe(II) complexes of 3-AP and its analogs can quench the radical and, subsequently, inactivate RNR. The potency of RNR inhibitors is highly dependent on the redox properties of the iron complexes, which can be tuned by ligand modifications. Complexes are found to be active within a narrow redox window imposed by the cellular environment.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry; vol 24, iss 5, 621-632; 0949-8257
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry vol 24, iss 5, 621-632 0949-8257
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391603870
Document Type :
Electronic Resource