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Organometallic Anticancer Compounds

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TLDR
The quest for alternative drugs to the well-known cisplatin and its derivatives, which are still used in more than 50% of the treatment regimes for patients suffering from cancer, is highly needed, and organometallic compounds have recently been found to be promising anticancer drug candidates.
Abstract
The quest for alternative drugs to the well-known cisplatin and its derivatives, which are still used in more than 50% of the treatment regimes for patients suffering from cancer, is highly needed.1,2 Despite their tremendous success, these platinum compounds suffer from two main disadvantages: they are inefficient against platinum-resistant tumors, and they have severe side effects such as nephrotoxicity. The latter drawback is the consequence of the fact that the ultimate target of these drugs is ubiquitous: It is generally accepted that Pt anticancer drugs target DNA, which is present in all cells.3,4 Furthermore, as a consequence of its particular chemical structure, cisplatin in particular offers little possibility for rational improvements to increase its tumor specificity and thereby reduce undesired side effects. In this context, organometallic compounds, which are defined as metal complexes containing at least one direct, covalent metal−carbon bond, have recently been found to be promising anticancer drug candidates. Organometallics have a great structural variety (ranging from linear to octahedral and even beyond), have far more diverse stereochemistry than organic compounds (for an octahedral complex with six different ligands, 30 stereoisomers exist!), and by rational ligand design, provide control over key kinetic properties (such as hydrolysis rate of ligands). Furthermore, they are kinetically stable, usually uncharged, and relatively lipophilic and their metal atom is in a low oxidation state. Because of these fundamental differences compared to “classical coordination metal complexes”, organometallics offer ample opportunities in the design of novel classes of medicinal compounds, potentially with new metal-specific modes of action. Interestingly, all the typical classes of organometallics such as metallocenes, half-sandwich, carbene-, CO-, or π-ligands, which have been widely used for catalysis or biosensing purposes, have now also found application in medicinal chemistry (see Figure ​Figure11 for an overview of these typical classes of organometallics). Figure 1 Summary of the typical classes of organometallic compounds used in medicinal chemistry. In this Perspective, we report on the recent advances in the discovery of organometallics with proven antiproliferative activity. We are emphasizing those compounds where efforts have been made to identify their molecular target and mode of action by biochemical or cell biology studies. This Perspective covers more classes of compounds and in more detail than a recent tutorial review by Hartinger and Dyson.(5) Furthermore, whereas recent reviews and book contributions attest to the rapid development of bioorganometallic chemistry in general,6,7 this Perspective focuses on their potential application as anticancer chemotherapeutics. Another very recent review article categorizes inorganic anticancer drug candidates by their modes of action.(8) It should be mentioned that a full description of all currently investigated types of compounds is hardly possible anymore in a concise review. For example, a particularly promising class of organometallic anticancer compounds, namely, radiolabeled organometallics, has been omitted for space limitations. Recent developments of such compounds have been reviewed in detail by Alberto.(9)

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Journal ArticleDOI

Design and Biological Evaluation of New Platinum(II) Complexes Bearing Ligands with DNA-Targeting Ability

TL;DR: A novel series of platinum(II) complexes bearing aliphatic amines and ligands with DNA-targeting properties was synthesized to achieve more potent and selective metallodrugs and demonstrates better cytotoxic activity on cancer cell lines when compared with the ligands and, importantly, with cisplatin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study of the effect of molecular structure and alkyl groups bound with tin(IV) on their cytotoxicity of organotin(IV) 2-phenyl-4-selenazole carboxylates

TL;DR: The results indicate that both di-n-butyltin(IV) and triphenyltin (IV) derivatives not only show excellent cytotoxic activities on cisplatin-sensitive lung cancer cell line A549 and but also exhibit good cytotoxicity against cisPlatin-insensitive colon cancer cell lines HCT-116 and Caco-2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of amide-triazole linkers on the electrochemical and biological properties of ferrocene-carbohydrate conjugates.

TL;DR: The compounds derived from xylose and ribose exhibited cytotoxicity on hormone-dependent and hormone-independent breast cancer cell lines, whereas the conjugates derived from glucose and galactose were found to be non-toxic in nature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Half-sandwich Iridium(III) complexes with triphenylamine-substituted dipyridine frameworks and bioactivity applications

TL;DR: Nine half-sandwich IrIII complexes show potent antitumor activity with IC50 values of 1.2–36.3 μM against A549 lung cancer cells and could target lysosomes effectively in cells with a high Pearson's colocalization coefficient.
Journal ArticleDOI

First Crystal Structure for a Gold Carbene-Protein Adduct.

TL;DR: The X-ray structure of the adduct formed in the reaction between the gold N-heterocyclic carbene compound Au(NHC)Cl (with NHC = 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazole-2-ylidene) and the model protein thaumatin is reported here.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Inflammation and cancer

TL;DR: It is now becoming clear that the tumour microenvironment, which is largely orchestrated by inflammatory cells, is an indispensable participant in the neoplastic process, fostering proliferation, survival and migration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular processing of platinum anticancer drugs.

TL;DR: This review focuses on recently discovered cellular pathways that are activated in response to cisplatin, including those involved in regulating drug uptake, the signalling of DNA damage, cell-cycle checkpoints and arrest, DNA repair and cell death.
BookDOI

Cisplatin : chemistry and biochemistry of a leading anticancer drug

TL;DR: The start: platinum complexes for the treatment of cancer - why the search goes on and new developments: structure-activity relationships within di- and trinuclear platinum phase I clinical anticancer agents the development of orally-active platinum drugs methods for screening the potential antitumor activity of platinum compounds in combinatorial libraries computational studies on platinum antitumors complexes and their adducts with nucleid acids constituents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioorganometallic chemistry—from teaching paradigms to medicinal applications

TL;DR: In this tutorial review, various aspects of bioorganometallic chemistry are introduced, with the main emphasis on medicinal organometallic compounds, and rational ligand design has been shown.
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