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  4. The role of the equatorial ligands for the redox behavior, mode of cellular accumulation and cytotoxicity of platinum(IV) prodrugs
 
research article

The role of the equatorial ligands for the redox behavior, mode of cellular accumulation and cytotoxicity of platinum(IV) prodrugs

Goeschl, Simone
•
Varbanov, Hristo P.  
•
Theiner, Sarah
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2016
Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry

The current study aims to elucidate the possible reasons for the significantly different pharmacological behavior of platinum(IV) complexes with cisplatin-, carboplatin- or nedaplatin-like cores and how this difference can be related to their main physicochemical properties. Chlorido-containing complexes are reduced fast (within hours) by ascorbate and are able to unwind plasmid DNA in the presence of ascorbate, while their tri- and tetracarboxylato analogs are generally inert under the same conditions. Comparison of the lipophilicity, cellular accumulation and cytotoxicity of the investigated platinum compounds revealed the necessity to define new structure-property/activity relationships (SPRs and SARs). The higher activity and improved accumulation of platinum(IV) complexes bearing Cl- in equatorial position cannot only be attributed to passive diffusion facilitated by their lipophilicity. Therefore, further platinum accumulation experiments under conditions where active/facilitated transport mechanisms are suppressed were performed. Under hypothermic conditions (4 degrees C), accumulation of dichloridoplatinum(IV) complexes is reduced down to 10% of the amount determined at 37 degrees C. These findings suggest the involvement of active and/or facilitated transport in cellular uptake of platinum(IV) complexes with a cisplatin-like core. Studies with ATP depletion mediated by oligomycin and low glucose partially confirmed these observations, but their feasibility was severely limited in the adherent cell culture setting. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2016.03.005
Web of Science ID

WOS:000378965200031

Author(s)
Goeschl, Simone
Varbanov, Hristo P.  
Theiner, Sarah
Jakupec, Michael A.
Galanski, Markus
Keppler, Bernhard K.
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry
Volume

160

Start page

264

End page

274

Subjects

Platinum(IV) complexes

•

Cellular accumulation

•

Facilitated/active transport

•

Redox behavior

•

Lipophilicity

•

Cytotoxicity

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCOM  
Available on Infoscience
October 18, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/129903
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