Phenalenyl Based Platinum Anticancer Compounds with Superior Efficacy: Design, Synthesis, Characterization, and Interaction with Nuclear DNA

Dutta, Pradip ; Kumari, Smita ; Jhonpeter, Justin ; Sharma, Rupali ; vijaykumar, gonela ; Das, Hari Sankar ; P, Sreejyothi ; Sil, Swagata ; Mandal, Swadhin K ; Sengupta, Aniruddha ; Sarkar, Arindam (2021) Phenalenyl Based Platinum Anticancer Compounds with Superior Efficacy: Design, Synthesis, Characterization, and Interaction with Nuclear DNA New Journal of Chemistry . ISSN 1144-0546

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1039/D0NJ06229D

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D0NJ06229D

Abstract

Significant efforts have been made to develop new platinum anticancer compounds since the discovery of cis-platin, however, non-specific toxicity or loss of efficacy remain some of the major challenges in this area of Platinum drug discovery. Newly developed platinum compounds, structurally distinct from the current molecules, imparting efficacy at lower concentrations than the current drugs, and interacting with DNA leading to cell death, may prove beneficial. In the current study, we designed, synthesized, and characterized three phenalenyl based platinum chloride compounds (1, 2, and 3) with the goal that labile Pt-Cl bond with a planar structure of phenalenyl moiety would enhance their interaction with DNA, leading to improved efficacy. In addition, it is assumed that the fluorescent property of these compounds would facilitate the mechanistic investigation. The crystal structure of compound 1 demonstrates a perfectly planar structure with a single Pt-Cl bond. In-vitro cell viability studies on cancer cell lines, including lung, colorectal, breast, and osteosarcoma revealed superior efficacy for compounds 1 and 2, relative to platinum drugs in clinical use. Localization studies utilized the strong fluorescence of compound 3 to investigate the mechanism of action, revealing its interaction with DNA, leading to cell death. This study enriches the arsenal of potential platinum-based anti-cancer therapeutics and provides an easy-to-use tool for the mechanism of action studies of these compounds.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Royal Society of Chemistry.
ID Code:118166
Deposited On:18 May 2021 07:38
Last Modified:18 May 2021 07:38

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