Enhancement of the physicochemical properties of [Pt(dien)(nucleobase)]2+ for HIVNCp7 targeting.
S D TsotsorosP B LutzA G DanielE J PetersonRaphael Enoque Ferraz de PaivaE RiveraY QuCraig A BayseNicholas P FarrellPublished in: Chemical science (2016)
Physicochemical properties of coordination compounds can be exploited for molecular recognition of biomolecules. The inherent π-π stacking properties of [Pt(chelate)(N-donor)]2+ ([PtN4]) complexes were modulated by systematic variation of the chelate (diethylenetriamine and substituted derivatives) and N-donor (nucleobase or nucleoside) in the formally substitution-inert PtN4 coordination sphere. Approaches to target the HIV nucleocapsid protein HIVNCp7 are summarized building on (i) assessment of stacking interactions with simple tryptophan or tryptophan derivatives to (ii) the tryptophan-containing C-terminal zinc finger and (iii) to the full two-zinc finger peptide and its interactions with RNA and DNA. The xanthosine nucleoside was identified as having significantly enhanced stacking capability over guanosine. Correlation of the LUMO energies of the modified nucleobases with the DFT π-stacking energies shows that frontier orbital energies of the individual monomers can be used as a first estimate of the π-stacking strength to Trp. Cellular accumulation studies showed no significant correlation with lipophilicity of the compounds, but all compounds had very low cytotoxicity suggesting the potential for antiviral selectivity. The conceptual similarities between nucleobase alkylation and platination validates the design of formally substitution-inert coordination complexes as weak Lewis acid electrophiles for selective peptide targeting.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- cancer therapy
- antiretroviral therapy
- molecular docking
- hiv infected
- single molecule
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hepatitis c virus
- hiv aids
- nucleic acid
- protein protein
- risk assessment
- cell free
- structure activity relationship
- coronavirus disease
- drug delivery
- amino acid
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus