4.6 Article

Study of Cytotoxic and Photodynamic Activities of Dyads Composed of a Zinc Phthalocyanine Appended to an Organotin

Journal

PHARMACEUTICALS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph14050413

Keywords

photodynamic therapy; chemotherapy; zinc (II) phthalocyanine; tin complex

Funding

  1. Campus France (Eiffel grant)
  2. Region Pays de la Loire (LUMOMAT project)
  3. CNRS-L
  4. Lebanese University

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The study synthesized and characterized two zinc phthalocyanine-tin conjugates, showing high cytotoxicity against cancer cells and a quenching effect on the photodynamic activity of zinc phthalocyanine by the nearby tin complex. This highlights the importance of preserving the photophysical properties of the sensitizer in such conjugates to combine photodynamic therapy activity with the cytotoxicity of the anticancer drug.
The combination of photodynamic therapy and chemotherapy is a promising strategy to enhance cancer therapeutic efficacy and reduce drug resistance. In this study two zinc(II) phthalocyanine-tin(IV) conjugates linked by a triethylene glycol chain were synthesized and characterized. In these complexes, the zinc(II) phthalocyanine was used as a potential photosensitizer for PDT and the tin complex was selected as cytostatic moiety. The two dyads composed of zinc(II) phthalocyanine and tin complexes exhibited high cytotoxicity, in absence of light stimulation, against MCF-7 human breast cancer cells with low LC50 values in the range of 0.016-0.453 mu M. In addition, these complexes showed superior cytotoxicity than their mixture of equimolar component, accompanied with a higher activity towards cancer cells compared to human healthy fibroblasts. However, under irradiation of the zinc phthalocyanine unit (at 650 nm) no photodynamic activity could be detected, due to the most likely quenching of zinc(II) phthalocyanine singlet excited state by the nearby tin complex according to a photoinduced electron transfer process. This study demonstrates the potential of heterometallic anticancer chemotherapeutics composed of a zinc phthalocyanine and tin complex, and it highlights that the development of such conjugates requires that the sensitizer preserves its photophysical properties and in particular its singlet oxygen sensitization ability in the conjugate in order to combine the PDT activity with the cytotoxicity of the anticancer drug.

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