4.5 Article

Biotin-Appended Iron(III) Complexes of Curcumin for Targeted Photo-Chemotherapy

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 2021, Issue 17, Pages 1640-1650

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/ejic.202001174

Keywords

Iron; Curcumin; Biotin; Apoptosis; Antitumor agents

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India [SR/S5/MBD-02/2007, EMR/2015/000742, CRG/2018/000081]
  2. DST [SR/S2/JCB-26/2007]
  3. DBT-IISc partnership program, the bio-imaging and flow cytometry facility in the Division of Biological Sciences, IISc

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Iron(III) complexes of curcumin with tridentate NNN-donor dipicolylamine-based ligands were prepared and studied for their photo-induced cytotoxicity in cancer cell lines. The biotinylated analogue of the complex showed enhanced cellular uptake and cytotoxicity, making it a potential targeted photodynamic therapy drug.
Iron(III) complexes of curcumin (Hcur) having a tridentate NNN-donor dipicolylamine-based ligand L-1 and its biotinylated analogue L-2, namely, [Fe(L-1)(cur)Cl] (1) and [Fe(L-2)(cur)Cl] (2), were prepared, characterized and their photo-induced cytotoxicity studied. The complexes exhibited curcumin-based absorption band near 430 nm and emission maxima at 520 nm. Complex 2 with a biotin moiety showed enhanced cellular uptake and higher cytotoxicity compared to its non-biotin analogue 1. The visible light induced cytotoxicity was studied in HeLa, MCF-7 and HepG2 cell lines. Complex 2 displayed photodynamic effect (400-700 nm, 10 J cm(-2)) giving an IC50 value of similar to 4 mu M in HeLa and MCF-7 cells, while being significantly non-toxic in the dark (IC50>100 mu M). A 5-fold increase in cytotoxicity was observed in HepG2 cells (IC50 similar to 0.7 mu M) for the biotin-appended complex 2. In vitro generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was observed from dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFDA) assay. The mode of cell death was apoptotic. Formation of hydroxyl radicals as the ROS was evidenced from the plasmid pUC19 DNA photo-cleavage studies. The complexes demonstrated the ability to act as targeted PDT (photodynamic therapy) drugs.

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