Co-reporter:R. Gautam, T. M. Chang, A. V. Astashkin, K. M. Lincoln and E. Tomat
Chemical Communications 2016 vol. 52(Issue 39) pp:6585-6588
Publication Date(Web):25 Apr 2016
DOI:10.1039/C6CC01961G
The dipyrrin-1,9-dione scaffold of heme metabolite propendyopent coordinates late transition metals (Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn) forming homoleptic, pseudo-tetrahedral complexes. Electrochemical and spectroscopic studies reveal that the monoanionic, bidentate ligands behave as electron reservoirs as the complexes reversibly host one or two ligand-based radicals.
Co-reporter:Eman A. Akam and Elisa Tomat
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2016 Volume 27(Issue 8) pp:1807
Publication Date(Web):July 29, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.6b00332
The implication of iron in the pathophysiology of colorectal cancer is documented at both the biochemical and epidemiological levels. Iron chelators are therefore useful molecular tools for the study and potential treatment of this type of cancer characterized by high incidence and mortality rates. We report a novel prochelation strategy that utilizes a disulfide redox switch to connect a thiosemicarbazone iron-binding unit with carbohydrate moieties targeting the increased expression of glucose transporters in colorectal cancer cells. We synthesized three glycoconjugates (GA2TC4, G6TC4, and M6TC4) with different connectivity and/or carbohydrate moieties, as well as an aglycone analog (ATC4). The sugar conjugates present increased solubility in neutral aqueous solutions, and the ester-linked conjugates M6TC4 and G6TC4 compete as effectively as d-glucose for transporter-mediated cellular uptake. The glycoconjugates show improved selectivity compared to the aglycone analog and are 6–11 times more toxic in Caco-2 colorectal adenocarcinoma cells than in normal CCD18-co colon fibroblasts.
Co-reporter:R. Gautam, E. A. Akam, A. V. Astashkin, J. J. Loughrey and E. Tomat
Chemical Communications 2015 vol. 51(Issue 24) pp:5104-5107
Publication Date(Web):25 Feb 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5CC00829H
Sirtinol is a known inhibitor of sirtuin proteins, a family of deacetylases involved in the pathophysiology of aging. Spectroscopic and structural data reveal that this compound is also an iron chelator forming high-spin ferric species in vitro and in cultured leukemia cells. Interactions with the highly regulated iron pool therefore contribute to its overall intracellular agenda.
Co-reporter:Ritika Gautam;Dr. Jonathan J. Loughrey;Dr. Andrei V. Astashkin;Dr. Jason Shearer;Dr. Elisa Tomat
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 49) pp:14894-14897
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201507302
Abstract
The tripyrrin-1,14-dione scaffold of urinary pigment uroerythrin coordinates divalent palladium as a planar tridentate ligand. Spectroscopic, structural and computational investigations reveal that the tripyrrindione ligand binds as a dianionic radical, and the resulting complex is stable at room temperature. One-electron oxidation and reduction reactions do not alter the planar coordination sphere of palladium(II) and lead to the isolation of two additional complexes presenting different redox states of the ligand framework. Unaffected by stability problems common to tripyrrolic fragments, the tripyrrindione ligand offers a robust platform for ligand-based redox chemistry.
Co-reporter:Ritika Gautam;Dr. Jonathan J. Loughrey;Dr. Andrei V. Astashkin;Dr. Jason Shearer;Dr. Elisa Tomat
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 49) pp:15107-15110
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201507302
Abstract
The tripyrrin-1,14-dione scaffold of urinary pigment uroerythrin coordinates divalent palladium as a planar tridentate ligand. Spectroscopic, structural and computational investigations reveal that the tripyrrindione ligand binds as a dianionic radical, and the resulting complex is stable at room temperature. One-electron oxidation and reduction reactions do not alter the planar coordination sphere of palladium(II) and lead to the isolation of two additional complexes presenting different redox states of the ligand framework. Unaffected by stability problems common to tripyrrolic fragments, the tripyrrindione ligand offers a robust platform for ligand-based redox chemistry.
Co-reporter:Tsuhen M. Chang, Sanhita Sinharay, Andrei V. Astashkin, and Elisa Tomat
Inorganic Chemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 14) pp:7518-7526
Publication Date(Web):July 10, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ic5008439
The pyrrolyldipyrrin motif is found in several naturally occurring prodigiosin pigments. The potential roles of the interactions of prodigiosins with transition metals and the properties of metal-bound pyrrolyldipyrrins, however, have been difficult to assess because of the very limited number of well-characterized stable complexes. Here, we show that the introduction of a meso-aryl substituent and an ethyl ester group during the sequential assembly of the three heterocycles affords a pyrrolyldipyrrin of enhanced coordinating abilities when compared to that of natural prodigiosins. UV–visible absorption studies indicate that this ligand promptly binds Zn(II) ions with 2:1 ligand-to-metal stoichiometry and Cu(II) ions with 1:1 stoichiometry. Notably, no addition of base is required for the formation of the resulting stable complexes. The crystal structures reveal that whereas the tetrahedral zinc center engages two nitrogen donors on each ligand, the pseudosquare planar copper complex features coordination of all three pyrrolic nitrogen atoms and employs the ester group as a neutral ligand. This first example of coordination of a redox-active transition metal within a fully conjugated pyrrolyldipyrrin framework was investigated spectroscopically by electron paramagnetic resonance to show that the 1:1 metal-to-ligand ratio found in the crystal structure is also maintained in solution.
Co-reporter:Eman A. Akam, Tsuhen M. Chang, Andrei V. Astashkin and Elisa Tomat
Metallomics 2014 vol. 6(Issue 10) pp:1905-1912
Publication Date(Web):07 Aug 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4MT00153B
Iron scavengers (chelators) offer therapeutic opportunities in anticancer drug design by targeting the increased demand for iron in cancer cells as compared to normal cells. Prochelation approaches are expected to avoid systemic iron depletion as chelators are liberated under specific intracellular conditions. In the strategy described herein, a disulfide linkage is employed as a redox-directed switch within the binding unit of an antiproliferative thiosemicarbazone prochelator, which is activated for iron coordination following reduction to the thiolate chelator. In glutathione redox buffer, this reduction event occurs at physiological concentrations and half-cell potentials. Consistent with concurrent reduction and activation, higher intracellular thiol concentrations increase cell susceptibility to prochelator toxicity in cultured cancer cells. The reduction of the disulfide switch and intracellular iron chelation are confirmed in cell-based assays using calcein as a fluorescent probe for paramagnetic ions. The resulting low-spin Fe(III) complex is identified in intact Jurkat cells by EPR spectroscopy measurements, which also document a decreased concentration of active ribonucleotide reductase following exposure to the prochelator. Cell viability and fluorescence-based assays show that the iron complex presents low cytotoxicity and does not participate in intracellular redox chemistry, indicating that this antiproliferative chelation strategy does not rely on the generation of reactive oxygen species.
Co-reporter:Tsuhen M. Chang and Elisa Tomat
Dalton Transactions 2013 vol. 42(Issue 22) pp:7846-7849
Publication Date(Web):16 Apr 2013
DOI:10.1039/C3DT50824B
A disulfide bond is incorporated in the scaffold of thiosemicarbazone iron chelators as a reduction/activation switch. Following reduction, thiol-containing ligands stabilize iron ions in their trivalent oxidation state. The antiproliferative activity of the new chelating systems is assessed in human cancer cell lines and in normal tissue.
Co-reporter:R. Gautam, T. M. Chang, A. V. Astashkin, K. M. Lincoln and E. Tomat
Chemical Communications 2016 - vol. 52(Issue 39) pp:NaN6588-6588
Publication Date(Web):2016/04/25
DOI:10.1039/C6CC01961G
The dipyrrin-1,9-dione scaffold of heme metabolite propendyopent coordinates late transition metals (Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn) forming homoleptic, pseudo-tetrahedral complexes. Electrochemical and spectroscopic studies reveal that the monoanionic, bidentate ligands behave as electron reservoirs as the complexes reversibly host one or two ligand-based radicals.
Co-reporter:R. Gautam, E. A. Akam, A. V. Astashkin, J. J. Loughrey and E. Tomat
Chemical Communications 2015 - vol. 51(Issue 24) pp:NaN5107-5107
Publication Date(Web):2015/02/25
DOI:10.1039/C5CC00829H
Sirtinol is a known inhibitor of sirtuin proteins, a family of deacetylases involved in the pathophysiology of aging. Spectroscopic and structural data reveal that this compound is also an iron chelator forming high-spin ferric species in vitro and in cultured leukemia cells. Interactions with the highly regulated iron pool therefore contribute to its overall intracellular agenda.
Co-reporter:Tsuhen M. Chang and Elisa Tomat
Dalton Transactions 2013 - vol. 42(Issue 22) pp:NaN7849-7849
Publication Date(Web):2013/04/16
DOI:10.1039/C3DT50824B
A disulfide bond is incorporated in the scaffold of thiosemicarbazone iron chelators as a reduction/activation switch. Following reduction, thiol-containing ligands stabilize iron ions in their trivalent oxidation state. The antiproliferative activity of the new chelating systems is assessed in human cancer cell lines and in normal tissue.