Gallium(III) Amide Corroles: DNA Interaction and Photodynamic Activity in Cancer Cells.
Meng-Yuan LiWu YangJing-He CenLing-Gui LiuGang YangHai Yang LiuYu-Hui LiaoXi-Hao ZhongPublished in: ChemPlusChem (2023)
A series of gallium(III) amide corroles including meso-5,15-bis(pentafluorophenyl)-10-(4-Pyridinamide-phenyl)corrole gallium (III) (1-Ga), meso-5,15-bis(pentafluorophenyl)-10-(4-Furamide-phenyl)corrole gallium(III) (2-Ga) and meso-5,15-bis(pentafluorophenyl)-10-(4-Thiophenamide-phenyl)corrole gallium(III) (3-Ga) were synthesized. The interaction of these complexes with DNA and their photodynamic antitumor activities have been studied. UV spectra titration showed that these gallium(III) corroles interact with calf thymus DNA (CT-DNA) through an external binding mode. All three gallium(III) corroles can effectively generate singlet oxygen under illumination and have good photostability. Among the three gallium(III) corroles, 2-Ga exhibited excellent photodynamic antitumor activity against the tested tumor cell lines under light irradiation (625±2 nm, 0.3 mW/cm 2 , 1.08 J/cm 2 ). The best phototoxicity was observed by 2-Ga against HepG2 cells (IC 50 =6.3±0.9), which is even better than temoporfin (IC 50 =8.4±1.8). It could block HepG2 cells in the sub-G0 phase and effectively induce apoptosis of HepG2 cells under 625 nm light irradiation.