Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Padova, Via Marzolo 1, 35131 Padova, Italy.
Anticancer Res. 2014 Jan;34(1):487-92.
The accidental discovery of the anticancer properties of cisplatin in the mid-1960s triggered the development of alternative platinum-based drugs. However, the platinum-based treatment of tumor diseases is massively hampered by severe side-effects and development of resistance. Sulfur-containing biomolecules play a significant role in platinum anticancer chemotherapy because of their high affinity to the platinum(II) ion. Sulfur is involved in the entire metabolic processing of platinum drugs. Strong and irreversible binding of cisplatin to intracellular thiolato ligands is considered a major step of inactivation, and reactions with sulfur donors in proteins are believed to affect enzymatic processes. Consequently, the development of novel metal-based compounds with a pharmacological profile different from that of clinically-established platinum drugs is a major goal of modern medicinal chemistry and drug design. Among the non-platinum antitumor agents, gold(III) complexes have recently gained increasing attention due to their strong tumor cell growth-inhibiting effects, generally achieved by exploiting non-cisplatin-like mechanisms of action. The real breakthrough is not simply the use of gold compounds to treat cancer, but the rational design of gold-based drugs which may be very effective, non-toxic and potentially selective towards cancer cells, their potential impact relying on the possible site-specific delivery in localized cancer, thus strongly improving cellular uptake and minimizing unwanted side-effects. Cancer cells are known to overexpress specific proteins and receptors needed for tumor growth. Among them, two integral plasma membrane proteins mediate the cellular uptake of di- and tripeptides and peptide-like drugs. They are present predominantly in epithelial cells of the small intestine, bile duct, mammary glands, lung, choroid plexus, and kidney but are also localized in other tissues and are up-regulated in some types of tumors. Accordingly, we have been designing gold(III)-peptide dithiocarbamato derivatives which combine both the antitumor properties and reduced side-effects of the previously reported gold(III) analogues with enhanced bioavailability and tumor selectivity achieved by exploiting peptide transporters. Our compounds showed interesting cytotoxic properties towards a number of cancer cell lines in vitro and in vivo on xenograft models, together with negligible organ and acute toxicity. With respect to their mechanisms of action, we identified mitochondria and proteasome as major in vitro and in vivo targets. These results allowed the filing of an international patent for the use of gold(III) peptidomimetics in cancer chemotherapy, as well as providing a solid starting point for them to enter phase I clinical trials in a few months.
顺铂抗癌特性的偶然发现,促使人们在 20 世纪 60 年代中期开发出了其他铂类药物。然而,铂类药物在肿瘤疾病治疗中的应用受到了严重副作用和耐药性的极大限制。含硫生物分子由于其与铂(II)离子的高亲和力,在铂类抗癌化疗中发挥着重要作用。硫参与了铂类药物的整个代谢过程。顺铂与细胞内硫醇配体的强而不可逆的结合被认为是失活的主要步骤,而与蛋白质中的硫供体的反应被认为会影响酶的过程。因此,开发具有与临床应用的铂类药物不同药理学特性的新型金属化合物是现代药物化学和药物设计的主要目标。在非铂类抗肿瘤药物中,由于其强大的肿瘤细胞生长抑制作用,金(III)配合物最近受到了越来越多的关注,通常通过利用非顺铂样作用机制来实现。真正的突破不仅仅是使用金化合物治疗癌症,而是合理设计金类药物,这些药物可能非常有效、无毒且对癌细胞具有潜在选择性,其潜在影响依赖于在局部癌症中的可能的靶向递药,从而大大提高细胞摄取并最小化不必要的副作用。众所周知,癌细胞过度表达肿瘤生长所需的特定蛋白质和受体。其中,两种完整的质膜蛋白介导二肽和三肽及肽类药物的细胞摄取。它们主要存在于小肠、胆管、乳腺、肺、脉络丛和肾脏的上皮细胞中,但也存在于其他组织中,并在某些类型的肿瘤中上调。因此,我们一直在设计金(III)-肽二硫代氨基甲酸盐衍生物,这些衍生物将以前报道的金(III)类似物的抗肿瘤特性和减少副作用与通过利用肽转运蛋白提高生物利用度和肿瘤选择性相结合。我们的化合物在体外和异种移植模型的体内对多种癌细胞系表现出有趣的细胞毒性,并具有可忽略的器官和急性毒性。关于它们的作用机制,我们确定了线粒体和蛋白酶体作为主要的体外和体内靶标。这些结果为我们申请了国际专利,以将金(III)肽模拟物用于癌症化疗,并为它们在几个月内进入 I 期临床试验提供了坚实的起点。