From the Design of Innovative Ti-Pt Heterometallic Complexes to the Development of Highly Anti-Proliferative Water-Soluble Cationic Titanocenes.
Audrey TrommenschlagerNesrine MabroukCindy RacoeurAmélie GodardCédric BalanLaurence DubrezAli BettaïebJérôme HussonPierre Le GendreCatherine PaulEwen BodioPublished in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2024)
Two innovative early/late Ti-Pt-heterobimetallic complexes were synthesized, characterized, and screened in cell-based assays using several human (SW480 and MDA-MB-231) and murine cancer cell lines (CT26 and EMT6) as well as a non-cancerous cell line (HMEC). The combination of the two metals - titanium(IV) and platinum (IV) - in a single molecule led to a synergistic biological activity (higher anti-proliferative properties than a mixture of each of the corresponding monometallic complexes). This study also investigated the benefits of associating a metal-free terpyridine moiety (with intrinsic biological activity) with a water-soluble titanocene fragment. The present work reveals that these combinations results in water-soluble titanocene compounds displaying an anti-proliferative activity down to the submicromolar level. One of these complexes induced an antitumor effect in vivo in CT26 tumor bearing BALB/C mice. The terpyridine moiety was also used to track the complex in vitro by multiphoton microscopy imaging.
Keyphrases
- water soluble
- single molecule
- atomic force microscopy
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- endothelial cells
- image quality
- dual energy
- high throughput
- contrast enhanced
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high glucose
- living cells
- single cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- papillary thyroid
- cell therapy
- young adults
- high speed
- diabetic rats
- metabolic syndrome
- squamous cell
- cell proliferation
- drug delivery
- adipose tissue
- mass spectrometry
- optical coherence tomography
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance
- insulin resistance