4.2 Article

Cyclic Thiosulfonates for Thiol-Mediated Uptake: Cascade Exchangers, Transporters, Inhibitors

Journal

JACS AU
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 839-852

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.1c00573

Keywords

dynamic covalent chemistry; cyclic thiosulfonates; exchange cascades; proticity; cellular uptake; lentivector entry

Funding

  1. University of Geneva
  2. National Centre for Competence in Research (NCCR) Chemical Biology
  3. NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering
  4. Swiss NSF [200020 204175]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200020_204175] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Thiol-mediated uptake is an effective method for cell penetration, and cyclic oligochalcogenides (COCs) have been found to be a useful tool in enabling and inhibiting this process. This study focuses on the unexplored COCs of higher oxidation levels and demonstrates their potential in enhancing cell uptake and inhibiting the entry of SARS-CoV-2 lentivectors. The results suggest that COCs with hydrophobic directing groups exhibit selective and synergistic exchange in hydrophobic pockets, making them promising candidates for cytosolic delivery and the evolution of dynamic covalent networks.
Thiol-mediated uptake is emerging as a powerful method to penetrate cells. Cyclic oligochalcogenides (COCs) have been identified as privileged scaffolds to enable and inhibit thiol-mediated uptake because they can act as dynamic covalent cascade exchangers, i.e., every exchange produces a new, covalently tethered exchanger. In this study, our focus is on the essentially unexplored COCs of higher oxidation levels. Quantitative characterization of the underlying dynamic covalent exchange cascades reveals that the initial ring opening of cyclic thiosulfonates (CTOs) proceeds at a high speed even at a low pH. The released sulfinates exchange with disulfides in aprotic but much less in protic environments. Hydrophobic domains were thus introduced to direct CTOs into hydrophobic pockets to enhance their reactivity. Equipped with such directing groups, fluorescently labeled CTOs entered the cytosol of living cells more efficiently than the popular asparagusic acid. Added as competitive agents, CTOs inhibit the uptake of various COC transporters and SARS-CoV-2 lentivectors. Orthogonal trends found with different transporters support the existence of multiple cellular partners to account for the diverse expressions of thiol-mediated uptake. Dominant self-inhibition and high activity of dimers imply selective and synergistic exchange in hydrophobic pockets as distinguishing characteristics of thiol-mediated uptake with CTOs. The best CTO dimers with hydrophobic directing groups inhibit the cellular entry of SARS-CoV-2, lentivectors with an IC50 significantly lower than the previous best CTO, below the 10 mu M threshold and better than ebselen. Taken together, these results identify CTOs as an intriguing motif for use in cytosolic delivery, as inhibitors of lentivector entry, and for the evolution of dynamic covalent networks in the broadest sense, with reactivity-based selectivity of cascade exchange emerging as a distinguishing characteristic that deserves further attention.

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