A polyoxomolybdate-based hybrid nano capsule as an antineoplastic agent.
Arti JoshiSobhna AcharyaNeeta DeviRuby GuptaDeepika SharmaMonika SinghPublished in: Nanoscale advances (2023)
Polyoxometalates (POMs) are versatile anionic clusters which have attracted a lot of attention in biomedical investigations. To counteract the increasing resistance effect of cancer cells and the high toxicity of chemotherapeutic treatments, POM-based metallodrugs can be strategically synthesized by adjusting the stereochemical and physicochemical features of POMs. In the present report a polyoxomolybdate (POMo) based organic-inorganic hybrid solid (C 6 H 16 N)(C 6 H 15 N) 2 [Mo 8 O 26 ]·3H 2 O, solid 1, has been synthesized and its antitumoral activities have been investigated against three cancer cell lines namely, A549 (Lung cancer), HepG2 (Liver cancer), and MCF-7 (Breast cancer) with IC50 values 56.2 μmol L -1 , 57.3 μmol L -1 , and 55.2 μmol L -1 respectively. The structural characterization revealed that solid 1 consists of an octa molybdate-type cluster connected by three triethylamine molecules via hydrogen bonding interactions. The electron microscopy analysis suggests the nanocapsule-like morphology of solid 1 in the size range of 50-70 nm. The UV-vis absorption spectra were used to assess the binding ability of synthesized POM-based solid 1 to calf thymus DNA (ctDNA), which further explained the binding interaction between POMo and ctDNA and the binding constant was calculated to be 2.246 × 10 3 giving evidence of groove binding.