4.8 Article

Mitochondria-targeting fluorescent molecules for high efficiency cancer growth inhibition and imaging

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 34, Pages 7946-7951

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9sc01410a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Science (BER), U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0008397]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81871406]
  3. 6th youth development foundation from the First Hospital of Jilin University [JDYY52015032]
  4. Jilin Provincial Health Special Project from the finance department of Jilin Province [2018SCZWSZX-018]

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Fluorescent mitochondria-accumulating delocalized lipophilic cations (DLCs) for cancer therapy have drawn significant attention in the field of cancer theranostics. One of the most promising fluorescent DLCs, F16, can selectively trigger the apoptosis and necrosis of cancer cells, making it an attractive targeted theranostic drug candidate. However, it suffers from low clinical translation potential, largely due to its inefficient anti-cancer activity (IC50 in the mu M range) and poorly understood structure-activity relationship (SAR). In this report, eleven indole-ring substituted F16 derivatives (F16s) were synthesized. Among these derivatives, 5BMF was identified as a highly effective theranostic agent, with in vitro studies showing a low IC50 of similar to 50 nM (to H2228 cells) and high cancer to normal cell selectivity index of 225. In vivo studies revealed that tumors treated with 5BMF were significantly suppressed (almost no growth over the treatment period) compared to the PBS treated control group, and also no obvious toxicity to mice was found. In addition, the tumor imaging capability of 5BMF was demonstrated by in vivo fluorescence imaging. Finally, we report for the first time a proposed SAR for F16 DLCs. Our work lays down a solid foundation for translating 5BMF into a novel and highly promising DLC for cancer theranostics.

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