4.6 Article

Design, Synthesis and Pharmacological Evaluation of Three Novel Dehydroabietyl Piperazine Dithiocarbamate Ruthenium (II) Polypyridyl Complexes as Potential Antitumor Agents: DNA Damage, Cell Cycle Arrest and Apoptosis Induction

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26051453

Keywords

dithiocarbamate; ruthenium polypyridyl complexes; antitumor activity; DNA damage; cell cycle arrest; apoptosis

Funding

  1. Innovative Team & Outstanding Talent Program of Colleges and Universities in Guangxi [2017-38]
  2. Guangxi New Century Ten, Hundred and Thousand Talents Project [(2017)42]
  3. Guangxi Natural Science Foundation [2016GXNSFAA380300, 2014GXNSFBA118050, 2018GXNSFAA138165]
  4. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Agricultural Resources Chemistry and Biotechnology [2019KF02]
  5. Middle-aged and Young Teachers' Basic Ability Promotion Project of Guangxi [2019KY0542]

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The novel metal complexes 6a and 6c exhibit superior antitumor activity compared to cisplatin, inducing DNA damage, G1 cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis to exert their effects.
The use of cisplatin is severely limited by its toxic side-effects, which has spurred chemists to employ different strategies in the development of new metal-based anticancer agents. Here, three novel dehydroabietyl piperazine dithiocarbamate ruthenium (II) polypyridyl complexes (6a-6c) were synthesized as antitumor agents. Compounds 6a and 6c exhibited better in vitro antiproliferative activity against seven tumor cell lines than cisplatin, they displayed no evident resistance in the cisplatin-resistant cell line A549/DPP. Importantly, 6a effectively inhibited tumor growth in the T-24 xenograft mouse model in comparison with cisplatin. Gel electrophoresis assay indicated that DNA was the potential targets of 6a and 6c, and the upregulation of p-H2AX confirmed this result. Cell cycle arrest studies demonstrated that 6a and 6c arrested the cell cycle at G1 phase, accompanied by the upregulation of the expression levels of the antioncogene p27 and the down-regulation of the expression levels of cyclin E. In addition, 6a and 6c caused the apoptosis of tumor cells along with the upregulation of the expression of Bax, caspase-9, cytochrome c, intracellular Ca2+ release, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and the downregulation of Bcl-2. These mechanistic study results suggested that 6a and 6c exerted their antitumor activity by inducing DNA damage, and consequently causing G1 stage arrest and the induction of apoptosis.

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