👤 Ma X.

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179
Articles
67
Name variants
Also published as: Ai X, Cai X, Chen X, Cheng X, Dai X, Ding X, Fan X, Feng X, Fu X, Ge X, Guan X, Guo X, Hao X, He X, Hong X, Hu X, Huang X, Jia X, Jiang X, Jie X, Kang X, Kong X, Lei X, Li X, Liao X, Lin X, Liu X, Lu X, Luo X, Ma X, Man X, Meng X, Mu X, Pan X, Peng X, Qian X, Qin X, Ran X, Ren X, S X, Shen X, Shi X, Su X, Sun X, Tan X, Tang X, Teng X, Tian X, Tong X, Wang X, Wei X, Wen X, Wu X, Xia X, Xing X, Xiong X, Xu X, Xue X, Yang X, Yao X, Yuan X, Zeng X, Zhang X, Zhao X, Zheng X, Zhu X, Zou X
articles
Liu X, Hao H, Ge X +8 more · 2019 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Four triphenylamine (TPA)-appended cyclometallated iridium(III) complexes were designed and synthesized. Photophysical properties of these complexes were studied, and density functional theory (DFT) w Show more
Four triphenylamine (TPA)-appended cyclometallated iridium(III) complexes were designed and synthesized. Photophysical properties of these complexes were studied, and density functional theory (DFT) was utilized to analyze the influence of the ancillary ligands (TPA-modified bipyridine) to these complexes. The introduction of TPA units could effectively adjust the lipid solubility of complexes (logP), and endowed complexes with potential bioactivity (anticancer, antibacterial and bactericidal activity), especially in the field of anticancer (the best value of IC50 is 4.34±0.01μM). Interestingly, complexe 4 show some selectivity for cancer cells versus normal cells. Meanwhile, complexes could effectively prevent the metastasis of cancer cells. Complexes can be transported by serum albumin and followed by the static quenching mechanism (Kq: 1013M-1s-1), disturb cell cycle at G0/G1 phase, and induce apoptosis. The favorable fluorescence property confirmed these complexes followed by an energy-dependent cellular uptake mechanism, effectively accumulated in lysosomes (PCC: >0.95) and induced lysosomal damage, and eventually leaded to cell death. Our study demonstrates that these complexes are potential anticancer agents with dual functions, including metastasis inhibition and lysosomal damage. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2019.110757
Biometal
Peng W, Hegazy AM, Jiang N +6 more · 2019 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Glioma stem cells (GSCs) are thought to be responsible for the recurrence and invasion of glioblastoma multiform (GBM), which have been evaluated and exploited as the therapeutic target for GBM. Cyclo Show more
Glioma stem cells (GSCs) are thought to be responsible for the recurrence and invasion of glioblastoma multiform (GBM), which have been evaluated and exploited as the therapeutic target for GBM. Cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes have been demonstrated as the potential anticancer agents, however, their antitumor efficacies against GSCs are still unknown. Herein, we investigated the antitumor activity of two cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes [Ir(ppy)2L](PF6) (Ir1) and [Ir(thpy)2L](PF6) (Ir2) (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine, thpy = 2-(2-thienyl)pyridine and L = 4,4'-Bis(hydroxymethyl)-2,2'-bipyridine) against GSCs. The results clearly indicate that Ir1 and Ir2 kill GSCs selectively with IC50 values ranging from 5.26-9.05 μM. Further mechanism research display that Ir1 and Ir2 can suppress the proliferation of GSCs, penetrate into GSCs efficiently, localize to mitochondria, and induce mitochondria-mediated apoptosis, including the loss of mitochondrial membrane (MMP), elevation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) and caspases activation. Moreover, Ir1 and Ir2 can destroy the GSCs self-renewal and unlimited proliferation capacity by affecting the GSCs colony formation. According our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the anti-GSCs properties of cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2019.110909
Biometal
Liu X, He X, Zhang X +7 more · 2019 · ChemBioChem · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
Iridium(III) complexes have attracted more and more attention in the past few years because of their potential antineoplastic activity. In this study, four IrIII complexes of the types [(η< Show more
Iridium(III) complexes have attracted more and more attention in the past few years because of their potential antineoplastic activity. In this study, four IrIII complexes of the types [(η5 -Cpx )Ir(N^N)Cl]PF6 (complexes 1 and 2) and [Ir(Phpy)2 (N^N)]PF6 (complexes 3 and 4) have been synthesized and characterized. They exhibit potential antineoplastic activity towards A549 cells, especially in the case of complex 1 [IC50 =(3.56±0.5) μm], which was nearly six times as effective as cisplatin [(21.31±1.7) μm]. Additionally, these complexes show some selectivity towards cancer cells over normal cells. They could be transported by serum albumin (binding constants were changed from 0.37×105 to 81.71×105  m-1 ). IrIII complexes 1 and 2 could catalyze the transformation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide reduced form (NADH) into NAD+ (turnover numbers 43.2, 11.9] and induce the accumulation of reactive oxygen species, thus confirming their antineoplastic mechanism of oxidation, whereas the cyclometalated complexes 3 and 4 were able to target the lysosome [Pearson co-localization coefficient (PCC)=0.73], cause lysosomal damage, and induce apoptosis. Understanding the mechanism of action would help further structure-activity optimization on these IrIII complexes as emerging cancer therapeutics. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201900268
Biometal apoptosis
Yang Y, Guo L, Ge X +5 more · 2019 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
The rational design by the introduction of fluorine into a compound has achieved success in the development of organic anticancer drugs. However, the fluorine effect in metal-based anticancer complexe Show more
The rational design by the introduction of fluorine into a compound has achieved success in the development of organic anticancer drugs. However, the fluorine effect in metal-based anticancer complexes has rarely been reported. In this contribution, we report the synthesis, characterization, chemical reactivity, and biological activity of a series of half-sandwich zwitterionic iridium(III) complexes containing different substituents in the η5-CpR ring. The molecular structures for complexes Ir1-Ir4 and Ir7 were determined by single-crystal X-ray crystallography techniques. Notably, the asymmetrically substituted fluoro complexes Ir4 and Ir6 in solution show two conformational isomers. These complexes have sufficient stability, exhibit fluorescence emission, and show potent catalytic activity in converting NADH to NAD+. The effect of the substituents in the η5-CpR ring for these zwitterionic complexes on their anticancer activity was systematically investigated. Surprisingly, the presence of fluorinated substituents gives rise to a significant increase in the anticancer activity. The lipophilicity and cellular uptake levels of these complexes appeared to be the primary factors for their cytotoxicity in this system. A microscopic mechanism study showed that the typical complex Ir4 entered A549 cancer cells through an energy-dependent pathway and was mainly located in lysosomes. Furthermore, an increase in ROS level, apoptosis induction, and cell-cycle perturbation together contribute to the anticancer potency of these zwitterionic complexes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b03006
Biometal apoptosis lysosomal cell death
Khan TM, Gul NS, Lu X +4 more · 2019 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
Two rhodium complexes Rh1 and Rh2 with isoquinoline derivatives were synthesized and characterized. Both complexes displayed strong anticancer activity against various cancer cells and low cytotoxicit Show more
Two rhodium complexes Rh1 and Rh2 with isoquinoline derivatives were synthesized and characterized. Both complexes displayed strong anticancer activity against various cancer cells and low cytotoxicity against non-cancer cells. These complexes triggered apoptosis via mitochondrial dysfunction that increased the levels of ROS and Ca2+ and released cytochrome C which ultimately activated caspases and the apoptosis pathway. The different biological activities of Rh1 and Rh2 could be associated with the presence of methoxy substituents on the ligands. In vivo studies showed that Rh1 effectively inhibited tumor growth in a T-24 xenograft mouse model with a less adverse effect than cisplatin. Overall, Rh1 and Rh2 induced apoptosis via mitochondrial pathways and could be developed as effective anticancer agents. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c9dt01951k
Biometal apoptosis
Hui S, Ghergurovich JM, Morscher RJ +8 more · 2018 · Nature · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Mammalian tissues are fuelled by circulating nutrients, including glucose, amino acids, and various intermediary metabolites. Under aerobic conditions, glucose is generally assumed to be burned fully Show more
Mammalian tissues are fuelled by circulating nutrients, including glucose, amino acids, and various intermediary metabolites. Under aerobic conditions, glucose is generally assumed to be burned fully by tissues via the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle) to carbon dioxide. Alternatively, glucose can be catabolized anaerobically via glycolysis to lactate, which is itself also a potential nutrient for tissues and tumours. The quantitative relevance of circulating lactate or other metabolic intermediates as fuels remains unclear. Here we systematically examine the fluxes of circulating metabolites in mice, and find that lactate can be a primary source of carbon for the TCA cycle and thus of energy. Intravenous infusions of 13C-labelled nutrients reveal that, on a molar basis, the circulatory turnover flux of lactate is the highest of all metabolites and exceeds that of glucose by 1.1-fold in fed mice and 2.5-fold in fasting mice; lactate is made primarily from glucose but also from other sources. In both fed and fasted mice, 13C-lactate extensively labels TCA cycle intermediates in all tissues. Quantitative analysis reveals that during the fasted state, the contribution of glucose to tissue TCA metabolism is primarily indirect (via circulating lactate) in all tissues except the brain. In genetically engineered lung and pancreatic cancer tumours in fasted mice, the contribution of circulating lactate to TCA cycle intermediates exceeds that of glucose, with glutamine making a larger contribution than lactate in pancreatic cancer. Thus, glycolysis and the TCA cycle are uncoupled at the level of lactate, which is a primary circulating TCA substrate in most tissues and tumours. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/nature24057
amino-acid
Yang Y, Guo L, Tian Z +5 more · 2018 · Chemistry – An Asian Journal · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
A family of novel imine-N-heterocyclic carbene ruthenium(II) complexes of the general formula [(η6 -p-cymene)Ru(C^N)Cl]PF6 - (where C^N is an imine-N-heterocyclic carb Show more
A family of novel imine-N-heterocyclic carbene ruthenium(II) complexes of the general formula [(η6 -p-cymene)Ru(C^N)Cl]PF6 - (where C^N is an imine-N-heterocyclic carbene chelating ligand with varying substituents) have been prepared and characterized. In this imine-N-heterocyclic carbene chelating ligand framework, there are three potential sites that can be modified, which distinguishes this class of ligand and provides a body of flexibilities and opportunities to tune the cytotoxicity of these ruthenium(II) complexes. The influence of substituent effects of three tunable domains on the anticancer activity and catalytic ability in converting coenzyme NADH to NAD+ is investigated. This family of complexes displays an exceedingly distinct anticancer activity against A549 cancer cells, despite their close structural similarity. Complex 9 shows the highest anticancer activity in this series against A549 cancer cells (IC50 =14.36 μm), with an approximately 1.5-fold better activity than the clinical platinum drug cisplatin (IC50 =21.30 μm) in A549 cancer cells. Mechanistic studies reveal that complex 9 mediates cell death mainly through cell stress, including cell cycle arrest, inducing apoptosis, increasing intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, and depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP). Furthermore, lysosomal damage is also detected by confocal microscopy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/asia.201801058
Biometal apoptosis lysosomal cell death
Zhao Z, Zhang X, Li CE +1 more · 2018 · Biomaterials · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
The effective design of a targeted drug delivery system could improve the therapeutic efficacy of anticancer drugs by reducing their undesirable adsorption and toxic side effects. Here, an RGD-peptide Show more
The effective design of a targeted drug delivery system could improve the therapeutic efficacy of anticancer drugs by reducing their undesirable adsorption and toxic side effects. Here, an RGD-peptide functionalized and bioresponsive ruthenium prodrug (Ru-RGD) was designed for both cancer therapy and clinical diagnosis. This prodrug can be selectively delivered to cervical tumor sites to enhance theranostic efficacy. The benzimidazole-based ligand of the complex is susceptible to acidic conditions so, after reaching the tumor microenvironment, ligand substitution occurs and the therapeutic drug is released. The deep-red emissions produced by both one-photon and two-photon excitation increases the potential of Ru-RGD for use in the deep tissue imaging of 3D tumor spheroids. The specific accumulation of the Ru prodrug in tumor sites allows for precise tumor diagnosis and therapy in vivo. Luminescence staining of 38 clinical patient specimens shows that Ru-RGD exhibits differences in binding capability between cervical cancer and normal tissue, with a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 100%. This study thus provides an approach for the effective design and application of targeted metal complexes in cancer therapy and clinical diagnosis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2018.12.002
Biometal
Li J, Tian Z, Ge X +3 more · 2018 · European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Li J, Tian Z, Ge X, Xu Z, Feng Y, Liu Z. Show less
A range of fluorine and naphthyridine-based half-sandwich iridium (III) and ruthenium (II) complexes were synthesized. The iridium complexes possessed excellent antiproliferative properties, a substan Show more
A range of fluorine and naphthyridine-based half-sandwich iridium (III) and ruthenium (II) complexes were synthesized. The iridium complexes possessed excellent antiproliferative properties, a substantial improvement over cisplatin, especially the best 1C containing the fluorine atom and 2C containing the naphthyridine. On the contrary, the ruthenium complexes displayed much less antiproliferative activity. Two X-ray crystal structures were determined. The cytotoxicity of the complexes can be changed flexible by regulating the metal center and the ancillary ligands. The best complex 1C was chose to study further on the mechanism of action. The chemical reactivity such as hydrolysis, reaction with nucleobases, glutathione and catalytic conversion of NADH to NAD+, were investigated. Complex 1C can react with 9-ethylguanine (9-EtG) and catalyze oxidation of NADH. In addition, the self-luminescence of the complex 1C was also successfully used in confocal microscopy images for elucidating the subcellular localization. Complex 1C specifically targeted to lysosomes in A549 cancer cells and caused lysosomal damages and promote cathepsin B released. Flow cytometry studies confirmed that the biological effects of this type of complexes induced apoptosis, especially late apoptosis. Our results suggested that changes in the mitochondria membrane potential were responsible for apoptosis. The chemistry and biological studies has showed that this class of metal complexes are worthy of further exploration for the design of novel anticancer drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.12.021
Biometal
Guo B, Liao C, Fang Y +4 more · 2018 · Nanomedicine · added 2026-05-01

Aim

The aim of this study was to encapsulate a ruthenium complex [Ru(ttbpy)2PIP](ClO4)2 (Ru) in liposomes to enhance their antitumor effect on human cervical c Show more

Aim

The aim of this study was to encapsulate a ruthenium complex [Ru(ttbpy)2PIP](ClO4)2 (Ru) in liposomes to enhance their antitumor effect on human cervical cancer.

Methods

The Ru-loaded PEGylated liposomes (Ru-Lip) were prepared using thin-film hydration method. The mechanism of action was studied.

Results

A novel Ru was successfully synthesized. Ru-Lip showed stronger cytotoxic activity against HeLa cells than Ru. Ru-Lip demonstrated a more significant increase in apoptosis, reactive oxygen species production and apoptosis-associated processes (intracellular calcium concentration, cytochrome c release and activation of Bax and caspase-3) than Ru. Ru-Lip exhibited greater blockade efficacy in the cell cycle G1 phase and greater DNA damage than Ru.

Conclusion

Ru-Lip significantly elevates the anticancer effect via reactive oxygen species-mediated mitochondrial dysfunctional pathway. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.2217/nnm-2018-0236
Biometal
Ma L, Lin X, Li C +5 more · 2018 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Although different types of metal-based anticancer complexes have been synthesized, novel complexes to reduce the serious side effect of cisplatin and conquer cancer metastasis are still highly desire Show more
Although different types of metal-based anticancer complexes have been synthesized, novel complexes to reduce the serious side effect of cisplatin and conquer cancer metastasis are still highly desired. Here, we report the synthesis, characterization, and biological activity of a novel heterodinuclear Pt(IV)-Ru(II) anticancer prodrug. The Pt(IV)-Ru(II) complex exhibits good stability in both water and PBS solution. Biological evaluation revealed that this bifunctional Pt(IV)-Ru(II) complex utilizes the advantages of two metal centers to have both cytotoxicity and antimetastatic property as designed. Although the complex has comparable cytotoxicities to cisplatin in tested cancer cell lines, this prodrug selectively kills cancer but not normal cells, and the IC50 values of the Pt(IV)-Ru(II) complex are 7-10 times higher than those of cisplatin toward normal cells. The cancer cell selectivity is further demonstrated by a cancer-normal cell coculture system. In addition, the antimetastatic properties of the heterodinuclear complex are assessed by using highly metastatic human breast cancer cells, and the results show that the migration and invasion of cancer cells are effectively restrained after the treatment. Moreover, the Pt(IV)-Ru(II) complex displays lower toxicity than cisplatin in developing zebrafish embryos. We, therefore, report an example of heterodinuclear Pt(IV)-Ru(II) complex not only to defeat both drug resistance and cancer metastasis but also having significantly improved cancer cell selectivity and reduced in vivo toxicity than cisplatin. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b00053
Biometal
Monro S, Cameron CG, Zhu X +10 more · 2018 · Photochemistry and Photobiology · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-05-01
Three new bis(2,2'-bipyridine)-heteroleptic Ru(II) dyads incorporating thienyl groups (n = 1-3, compounds 1, 2 and 3, respectively) appended to 1,10-phenanthroline were synthesized and characterized t Show more
Three new bis(2,2'-bipyridine)-heteroleptic Ru(II) dyads incorporating thienyl groups (n = 1-3, compounds 1, 2 and 3, respectively) appended to 1,10-phenanthroline were synthesized and characterized to investigate the impact of n on the photophysical and photobiological properties within the series. All three complexes showed unstructured emission near 618 nm from a triplet metal-to-ligand charge transfer (3 MLCT) state with a lifetime (τem ) of approximately 1 μs. Transient absorption measurements revealed an additional excited state that was nonemissive and long-lived (τTA  = 43 μs for 2 and 27 μs for 3), assigned as a triplet intraligand (3 IL) state that was accessible only in 2 and 3. All three complexes were strong singlet oxygen (1 O2 ) sensitizers, with quantum yields (Φ ) for 2 and 3 being the largest (74-78%), and all three were photocytotoxic to cancer cells with visible light activation in the order: 3 > 2 > 1. Cell-free DNA photodamage followed the same trend, where potency increased with decreasing 3 IL energy. Compounds 2 and 3 also showed in vitro photobiological effects with red light (625 nm), where their molar absorptivities were <100 m-1  cm-1 . These findings highlight that Ru(II) dyads derived from α-oligothiophenes directly appended to 1,10-phenanthroline-namely 2 and 3-possess low-lying 3 IL states that are highly photosensitizing, and they may therefore be of interest for photobiological applications such as photodynamic therapy (PDT). Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1111/php.13012
Biometal
Streciwilk W, Terenzi A, Cheng X +7 more · 2018 · European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Fluorescent 4-ethylthio-1,8-naphthalimides containing rhodium(I) N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) and ruthenium (II) NHC fragments were synthesised and evaluated for their antiproliferative effects, cellu Show more
Fluorescent 4-ethylthio-1,8-naphthalimides containing rhodium(I) N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) and ruthenium (II) NHC fragments were synthesised and evaluated for their antiproliferative effects, cellular uptake and DNA-binding activity. Both types of organometallics triggered ligand dependent efficient cytotoxic effects against tumor cells with the rhodium(I) NHC derivatives causing stronger effects than the ruthenium (II) NHC analogues. Antiproliferative effects could also be observed against several pathogenic Gram-positive bacterial strains, whereas the growth of Gram-negative bacteria was not substantially affected. Cellular uptake was confirmed by atomic absorption spectroscopy as well as by fluorescence microscopy indicating a general ligand dependent accumulation in the cells. An in-depth study on the interaction with DNA confirmed insertion of the naphthalimide moiety between the planar bases of B-DNA via an intercalation mechanism, as well as its stacking on top of the quartets of G-quadruplex structures. Furthermore, additional coordinative binding of the organometallic complexes to the model DNA base 9-ethylguanine could be detected. The studied compounds thus represent promising bioorganometallics featuring strong pharmacological effects in combination with excellent cellular imaging properties. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.06.056
Biometal
Li Y, Wu Q, Yu G +4 more · 2018 · European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
In this study, four polypyridyl ruthenium(II) complexes, namely, [(L1)2RuL2]·2ClO4 (1: L1 = phen, L2 = o-TFPIP, 2: L1 = bpy Show more
In this study, four polypyridyl ruthenium(II) complexes, namely, [(L1)2RuL2]·2ClO4 (1: L1 = phen, L2 = o-TFPIP, 2: L1 = bpy, L2 = o-TFPIP, 3: L1 = phen, L2 = o-MOPIP, and 4: L1 = bpy, L2 = o-MOPIP), were synthesized with different phenanthroimidazole derivatives, and their inhibitory activities were tested against various cancer cells. Among the Ru(II) complexes, 1 excellently inhibited the proliferation and induced the apoptosis of HepG2 cell. Importantly, 1 was mainly distributed in the cell mitochondria and markedly induced the dissipation of mitochondrial membrane potential, possibly attributing to DNA damage induced by the Ru(II) complexes. Synthetic Ru(II) complexes can suppress the growth of tumor cells in zebrafish xenograft model with low toxicity at effective concentrations. These results inspired us to further develop polypyridyl ruthenium(II) complexes as potential potent inhibitors against liver cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.12.041
Biometal
Tian Z, Li J, Zhang S +7 more · 2018 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Poor selectivity between cancer cells and normal cells is one of the major limitations of cancer chemotherapy. Lysosome-targeted ruthenium-based complexes target tumor cells selectively, only displayi Show more
Poor selectivity between cancer cells and normal cells is one of the major limitations of cancer chemotherapy. Lysosome-targeted ruthenium-based complexes target tumor cells selectively, only displaying rather weak cytotoxicity or inactivity toward normal cells. Confocal microscopy was employed for the first time to determine the cellular localization of the half-sandwich Ru complex. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b01944
Biometal
Zhao X, Li L, Yu G +5 more · 2018 · Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Polypyridine Ru(II) complexes have long been deemed to excellent antitumor agents that inhibit the proliferation of breast cancer cells. Nevertheless, their effects on the metastatic potency of breast Show more
Polypyridine Ru(II) complexes have long been deemed to excellent antitumor agents that inhibit the proliferation of breast cancer cells. Nevertheless, their effects on the metastatic potency of breast cancer cells need further research. Herein, a class of polypyridine Ru(II) complexes coordinated with phenazine derivates (DPPZ) ([Ru(bpy)2(DPPZ-R)](ClO4)2, Ru(bpy) 2 DPPZ: R = -H, Ru(bpy) 2 BrDPPZ: R = -Br, Ru(bpy) 2 MDPPZ: R = -CH3, Ru(bpy)2BnDPPZ: R = -acene, Ru(bpy) 2 BEDPPZ: R = -C ≡ C(C6H5)) was synthesized by introducing different substituent groups to regulate the electron cloud density and planarity of the main ligands. Results indicated that this class of DPPZ-based Ru(II) complexes exhibited promising inhibitory effect against MDA-MB-231 triple-negative breast cancer cells, especially for Ru(bpy) 2 BEDPPZ, which is comparable with that of cisplatin. In addition, Ru(bpy) 2 BEDPPZ effectively inhibited the migration and invasion of MDA-MB-231 cells in vitro and suppressed focal adhesion and stress fiber formation. Moreover, it effectively blocked MDA-MB-231 cell metastasis in blood vessels and restrained angiogenesis formation in a zebrafish xenograft breast cancer model. Further studies showed that the mechanisms may involve DNA damage-mediated apoptosis probably due to Ru(bpy) 2 BEDPPZ, which was enriched in the cell nucleus and induced DNA damage. All these results suggested that the DPPZ-based Ru(II) complexes can act as potent anti-metastasis agents. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2018.11.010
Biometal
Hao H, Liu X, Ge X +6 more · 2018 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Eight half-sandwich iridiumIII (IrIII) complexes of the general formula [(η5-Cpxbiph)Ir(O^N)Cl] (Cpxbiph is tetramethyl(biphenyl)cyclopentadienyl Show more
Eight half-sandwich iridiumIII (IrIII) complexes of the general formula [(η5-Cpxbiph)Ir(O^N)Cl] (Cpxbiph is tetramethyl(biphenyl)cyclopentadienyl, and the O^N is α-picolinic acid chelating ligand and its derivatives) were synthesized and characterized. Compared with cis-platin widely used in clinic, target IrIII complexes showed at most five times more potent antitumor activity against A549 cells by the MTT (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide) assay. IrIII complexes could be transported by serum albumin, bind with DNA, catalyze the oxidation of nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotid (NADH) and induce the production of reactive oxygen species, which confirmed the antitumor mechanism of oxidation. IrIII complexes could enter A549 cells followed by an energy-dependent cellular uptake mechanism, meanwhile, target the mitochondria and lysosomes with the Pearson's colocalization coefficient of 0.33 and 0.74, respectively, lead to the lysosomal destruction and the change of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), and eventually induce apoptosis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2018.12.012
Biometal
Han Y, Tian Z, Zhang S +6 more · 2018 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Series of half-sandwich IrIIIN-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) antitumor complexes [(η5-Cp*)Ir(C^C)Cl] have been synthesized and characterized (Cp* is pentamethyl cyclopentadienyl, an Show more
Series of half-sandwich IrIIIN-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) antitumor complexes [(η5-Cp*)Ir(C^C)Cl] have been synthesized and characterized (Cp* is pentamethyl cyclopentadienyl, and C^C are four NHC chelating ligands containing phenyl rings at different positions). IrIII complexes showed potent antitumor activity with IC50 values ranged from 3.9 to 11.8 μM against A549 cells by the MTT assay. Complexes can catalyze the conversion of the coenzyme NADH to NAD+ and induce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and bonding to BSA by static quenching mode. Complexes can arrest the cell cycle in G1 or S phase and reduce the mitochondrial membrane potential. Confocal microscopy test show complexes could target the lysosome and mitochondria in cells with the Pearson's colocalization coefficient of 0.82 and 0.21 after 12 h, respectively, and followed by an energy-dependent cellular uptake mechanism. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2018.09.009
Biometal apoptosis
Yang Y, Guo L, Ge X +5 more · 2018 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
We herein report the synthesis, characterization, catalytic ability in converting coenzyme NADH to NAD+ and anticancer activity of half-sandwich iridium(III) complexes, [(η5-CpShow more
We herein report the synthesis, characterization, catalytic ability in converting coenzyme NADH to NAD+ and anticancer activity of half-sandwich iridium(III) complexes, [(η5-Cpxbiph)Ir(C^N)Cl]PF6-, where Cpxbiph = tetramethyl(biphenyl)cyclopentadienyl, C^N = varying imine-N-heterocyclic carbene ligands. The molecular structure of [(η5-Cpxbiph)Ir(L6)Cl]PF6 (complex Ir6), exhibiting the familiar "piano-stool" geometry, has been authenticated by X-ray crystallography. The anticancer activities of these complexes can be governed via substituent effects of three tunable domains and the ligand substituted variants offer an effective chelate ligand set that distinguishes anticancer activity and catalytic ability. Notably, complex Ir6 displays the greatest cytotoxic activities (IC50 = 0.85 μM), whose anticancer activity is more approximately 25-fold higher than that of cisplatin. The initial cell death mechanistic insight displays that this group of iridium(III) complexes exerts anticancer effects via cell cycle arrest, apoptosis induction and loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential. In addition, the confocal microscopy imaging shows that the complex Ir6 can damage lysosome. Overall, preliminary structure-activity relationships study and understanding of the cell death mechanism perhaps provide a rational strategy for enhancing anticancer activity of this family of complexes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2018.11.007
Biometal
Yang Y, Guo L, Tian Z +6 more · 2018 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
We, herein, report the synthesis, characterization, luminescence properties, anticancer, and antibacterial activities of a family of novel half-sandwich iridium(III) complexes of the general formula [ Show more
We, herein, report the synthesis, characterization, luminescence properties, anticancer, and antibacterial activities of a family of novel half-sandwich iridium(III) complexes of the general formula [(η5-Cpx)Ir(C^N)Cl]PF6- [Cpx = pentamethylcyclopentadienyl (Cp*) or tetramethyl(biphenyl)-cyclopentadienyl (Cpxbiph)] bearing versatile imine-N-heterocyclic carbene ligands. In this complex framework, substituents on four positions could be modulated, which distinguishes this class of complex and provides a large amount of flexibility and opportunity to tune the cytotoxicity of complexes. The X-ray crystal structures of complexes 4 and 10 exhibit the expected "piano-stool" geometry. With the exception of 1, 2, and 11, each complex shows potent cytotoxicity, with IC50 (half-maximum inhibitory concentration) values ranging from 1.99 to 25.86 μM toward A549 human lung cancer cells. First, the effect of four positions bearing different substituents in the complex framework on the anticancer activity, that is, structure-activity relationship, was systematically studied. Complex 8 (IC50 = 1.99 μM) displays the highest anticancer activities, whose cytotoxicity is more than 10-fold higher than that of the clinical platinum drug cisplatin against A549 cancer cells. Second, their chemical reactivity including nucleobases binding, catalytic activity in converting coenzyme NADH to NAD+, reaction with glutathione (GSH), and bovine serum albumin (BSA) binding is investigated. No reaction with nucleobase is observed. However, these iridium(III) complexes bind rapidly to GSH and can catalyze oxidation of NADH to NAD+. In addition, they show moderate binding affinity to BSA and the fluorescence quenching of BSA by the iridium (III) complexes is due to the static quenching. Third, the mode of cell death was also explored through flow cytometry experiments, including cell cycle, apoptosis induction, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and mitochondrial membrane potential. It seems that cell cycle perturbation, apoptosis induction, increase of ROS level and loss of mitochondrial membrane potential together contribute to the anticancer potency of these complexes. Last, the use of confocal microscopy provides insights into the microscopic mechanism that the typical and most active complex 8 enters A549 lung cancer cells mainly through energy-dependent pathway and is located in lysosome. Furthermore, lysosome damage and nuclear morphology were detected by confocal microscopy. Nuclear condensation and apoptotic bodies may finally induce cells apoptosis. Interestingly, complex 8 also shows antibacterial activity against Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus. This work may provide an alternative and effective strategy to smart design of potent organometallic half-sandwich iridium(III) anticancer drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b01656
Biometal apoptosis
Kong D, Tian M, Guo L +7 more · 2018 · JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry · Springer · added 2026-05-01
Organometallic half-sandwich IrIII complexes of the type [(η5-Cpx)Ir(N^N)Cl]PF6 1-6, where Cpx = C5Me5 (Cp*), C5 Show more
Organometallic half-sandwich IrIII complexes of the type [(η5-Cpx)Ir(N^N)Cl]PF6 1-6, where Cpx = C5Me5 (Cp*), C5Me4C6H5 (Cpxph), C5Me4C6H4C6H5 (Cpxbiph), N^N is imionopyridine chelating ligand, were prepared and characterized. The X-ray crystal structure of complex 1 has been determined. Four compounds displayed higher anticancer potency than clinically used anticancer drug cisplatin against A549 cancer cells, especially complex 3 which is 8 times more active than cisplatin. No hydrolysis was observed by NMR and UV-Vis for complexes 3 and 6; however, these complexes show big differences in nucleobase binding, mainly decided by the imionopyridine chelating ligand. Complex 3 is stable in the presence of glutathione, but 6 reacted rapidly with glutathione. The octanol/water partition coefficients (log P) of 3 and 6 have been determined. In addition, these complexes display effective catalytic activity in converting coenzyme NADH to NAD+ by accepting hydride to form an Ir hydride adduct. The mechanism of actions of these complexes involves apoptosis induction, cell cycles arrest, and significant increase of reactive oxygen species levels in A549 cancer cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00775-018-1578-0
Biometal
He X, Tian M, Liu X +7 more · 2018 · Chemistry – An Asian Journal · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
Organometallic half-sandwich IrIII complexes of the type [(η5 -Cpx )Ir(N^N)Cl]PF6 (Cpx : Cp* or its phenyl Cpxph or biphenyl Cpxb Show more
Organometallic half-sandwich IrIII complexes of the type [(η5 -Cpx )Ir(N^N)Cl]PF6 (Cpx : Cp* or its phenyl Cpxph or biphenyl Cpxbiph derivatives; N^N: triphenylamine (TPA)-substituted bipyridyl ligand groups) were synthesized and characterized. The complexes showed excellent bovine serum albumin (BSA) and DNA binding properties and were able to oxidize NADH to NAD+ (NAD=nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) efficiently. The complexes induced apoptosis effectively and led to the emergence of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cells. All complexes showed potent cytotoxicity with IC50 values ranging from 1.5 to 7.1 μm toward A549 human lung cancer cells after 24 hours of drug exposure, which is up to 14 times more potent than cisplatin under the same conditions. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/asia.201800103
Biometal
Zhang H, Guo L, Tian Z +7 more · 2018 · Chemical Communications · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
The rational design of the ligands around transition metals has achieved success in the development of anticancer complexes. In this contribution, a series of organometallic half-sandwich iridium(iii) Show more
The rational design of the ligands around transition metals has achieved success in the development of anticancer complexes. In this contribution, a series of organometallic half-sandwich iridium(iii) complexes with various corresponding counteranions have been prepared and characterized. The size and coordination ability of the counteranions exert a great influence on the chemical reactivity and anticancer activity of these complexes. The influence of the counteranions on the cell cycle, apoptosis, ROS and mitochondrial membrane potential is also discussed. This work has shown for the first time that the modification of counteranions can affect the anticancer activity of transition metal-based complexes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/C8CC01326H
Biometal
Lam TL, Tong KC, Yang C +8 more · 2018 · Chemical Science · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
A panel of iridium(iii) porphyrin complexes containing axial N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligand(s) were synthesized and characterized. X-ray crystal structures of the bis-NHC complexes [IrIIIShow more
A panel of iridium(iii) porphyrin complexes containing axial N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligand(s) were synthesized and characterized. X-ray crystal structures of the bis-NHC complexes [IrIII(ttp)(IMe)2]+ (2a), [IrIII(oep)(BIMe)2]+ (2d), [IrIII(oep)(I i Pr)2]+ (2e) and [IrIII(F20tpp)(IMe)2]+ (2f) display ruffled porphyrin rings with mesocarbon displacements of 0.483-0.594 Å and long Ir-CNHC bonds of 2.100-2.152 Å. Variable-temperature 1H NMR analysis of 2a reveals that the macrocycle porphyrin ring inversion takes place in solution with an activation barrier of 40 ± 1 kJ mol-1. The UV-vis absorption spectra of IrIII(por)-NHC complexes display split Soret bands. TD-DFT calculations and resonance Raman experiments show that the higher-energy Soret band is derived from the 1MLCT dπ(Ir) → π*(por) transition. The near-infrared phosphorescence of IrIII(por)-NHC complexes from the porphyrin-based 3(π, π*) state features broad emission bands at 701-754 nm with low emission quantum yields and short lifetimes (Φ em < 0.01; τ < 4 μs). [IrIII(por)(IMe)2]+ complexes (por = ttp and oep) are efficient photosensitizers for 1O2 generation (Φ so = 0.64 and 0.88) and are catalytically active in the light-induced aerobic oxidation of secondary amines and arylboronic acid. The bis-NHC complexes exhibit potent dark cytotoxicity towards a panel of cancer cells with IC50 values at submicromolar levels. The cytotoxicity of these complexes could be further enhanced upon light irradiation with IC50 values as low as nanomolar levels in association with the light-induced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Bioimaging of [IrIII(oep)(IMe)2]+ (2c) treated cells indicates that this Ir complex mainly targets the endoplasmic reticulum. [IrIII(oep)(IMe)2]+ catalyzes the photoinduced generation of singlet oxygen and triggers protein oxidation, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and the inhibition of angiogenesis. It also causes pronounced photoinduced inhibition of tumor growth in a mouse model of human cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/C8SC02920B
Biometal
Lu X, Wu YM, Yang JM +8 more · 2018 · European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
A series of 2(1H)-quinolinone derivatives and their rhodium (III) complexes were designed and synthesized. All the rhodium (III) complexes exhibited higher in vitro cytotoxicity for Hep G2, HeLa 229, Show more
A series of 2(1H)-quinolinone derivatives and their rhodium (III) complexes were designed and synthesized. All the rhodium (III) complexes exhibited higher in vitro cytotoxicity for Hep G2, HeLa 229, MGC80-3, and NCI-H460 human tumor cell lines than their ligands and cisplatin, and among them complex 9 was found to be selectively cytotoxic to tumor cells. Further investigation revealed that complex 9 caused cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase and induced apoptosis, and inhibited the proliferation of Hep G2 cells by impeding the phosphorylation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and its downstream enzymes. Complex 9 also up-regulated the proapoptotic proteins Bak, Bax, and Bim, which altogether activated caspase-3/9 to initiate cell apoptosis. Notably, complex 9 effectively inhibited tumor growth in the NCI-H460 xenograft mouse model with less adverse effect than cisplatin. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.03.074
Biometal apoptosis
Singh A, Venkannagari S, Oh KH +22 more · 2017 · ACS Chemical Biology · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Loss of function mutations in Kelch-like ECH Associated Protein 1 (KEAP1), or gain-of-function mutations in nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2), are common in non-small cell lung cancer Show more
Loss of function mutations in Kelch-like ECH Associated Protein 1 (KEAP1), or gain-of-function mutations in nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2), are common in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and associated with therapeutic resistance. To discover novel NRF2 inhibitors for targeted therapy, we conducted a quantitative high-throughput screen using a diverse set of ∼400 000 small molecules (Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository Library, MLSMR) at the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. We identified ML385 as a probe molecule that binds to NRF2 and inhibits its downstream target gene expression. Specifically, ML385 binds to Neh1, the Cap 'N' Collar Basic Leucine Zipper (CNC-bZIP) domain of NRF2, and interferes with the binding of the V-Maf Avian Musculoaponeurotic Fibrosarcoma Oncogene Homologue G (MAFG)-NRF2 protein complex to regulatory DNA binding sequences. In clonogenic assays, when used in combination with platinum-based drugs, doxorubicin or taxol, ML385 substantially enhances cytotoxicity in NSCLC cells, as compared to single agents. ML385 shows specificity and selectivity for NSCLC cells with KEAP1 mutation, leading to gain of NRF2 function. In preclinical models of NSCLC with gain of NRF2 function, ML385 in combination with carboplatin showed significant antitumor activity. We demonstrate the discovery and validation of ML385 as a novel and specific NRF2 inhibitor and conclude that targeting NRF2 may represent a promising strategy for the treatment of advanced NSCLC. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.6b00651
DNA-binding Pt amino-acid anticancer
V Hotamisligil, ED Werner, J Giraud +1206 more · 2017 · Immunity · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
V Hotamisligil, ED Werner, J Giraud, YH Lee, SE Shoelson, MF White, MC Arkan, AL Hevener, FR Greten, S Maeda, ZW Li, JM Long, A Wynshaw-Boris, G Poli, J Olefsky, M Karin, N Arpaia, C Campbell, X Fan, S Dikiy, J van der Veeken, P deRoos, H Liu, JR Cross, K Pfeffer, PJ Coffer, DB Ballak, R Stienstra, A Hijmans, LA Joosten, MG Netea, CJ Tack, PJ Barnes, AM Bernstein, MF Roizen, L Martinez, SA Berson, RS Yalow, B Beutler, D Greenwald, JD Hulmes, M Chang, YC Pan, J Mathison, R Ulevitch, A Cerami, P Bhargava, C Li, KJ Stanya, D Jacobi, L Dai, S Liu, MR Gangl, DA Harn, CH Lee, G Boden, X Duan, C Homko, EJ Molina, W Song, O Perez, P Cheung, S Merali, E Boriushkin, JJ Wang, J Li, M Bhatta, SX Zhang, SE Borst, GJ Bagby, JR Brestoff, BS Kim, SA Saenz, RR Stine, LA Monticelli, GF Sonnenberg, JJ Thome, DL Farber, K Lutfy, P Seale, JS Burrill, EK Long, B Reilly, Y Deng, IM Armitage, PE Scherer, DA Bernlohr, V Byles, AJ Covarrubias, I Ben-Sahra, DW Lamming, DM Sabatini, BD Manning, T Horng, D Cai, M Yuan, DF Frantz, PA Melendez, L Hansen, J Lee, JS Campbell, L Prichard, F Schaper, J Schmitz, A Stephenson-Famy, ME Rosenfeld, GM Argast, PC Heinrich, N Fausto, H Cao, K Gerhold, JR Mayers, MM Wiest, SM Watkins, GS Hotamisligil, M Sekiya, ME Ertunc, MF Burak, A White, K Inouye, LM Rickey, BC Ercal, M Furuhashi, SS Cao, KL Luo, L Shi, EA Carswell, LJ Old, RL Kassel, S Green, N Fiore, B Williamson, CH Chang, JD Curtis, LB Maggi, B Faubert, AV Villarino, D O'Sullivan, SC Huang, GJ van der Windt, J Blagih, J Qiu, HR Chang, HJ Kim, X Xu, AW Ferrante, YH Chang, KT Ho, SH Lu, CN Huang, MY Shiau, A Chawla, KD Nguyen, YP Goh, KW Cho, BF Zamarron, LA Muir, K Singer, CE Porsche, JB DelProposto, L Geletka, KA Meyer, RW O'Rourke, CN Lumeng, KJ Chung, A Chatzigeorgiou, M Economopoulou, R Garcia-Martin, VI Alexaki, I Mitroulis, M Nati, J Gebler, T Ziemssen, SE Goelz, I Cimen, B Kocaturk, S Koyuncu, O Tufanli, UI Onat, AD Yildirim, O Apaydin, S Demirsoy, ZG Aykut, UT Nguyen, DE Cintra, JR Pauli, EP Araujo, JC Moraes, CT de Souza, M Milanski, J Morari, A Gambero, MJ Saad, LA Velloso, P Cohen, JD Levy, Y Zhang, A Frontini, DP Kolodin, KJ Svensson, JC Lo, X Zeng, L Ye, MJ Khandekar, KD Copps, P Cornelius, M Marlowe, MD Lee, PH Pekala, RM da Costa, KB Neves, FL Mestriner, P Louzada-Junior, T Bruder-Nascimento, RC Tostes, P Darkhal, M Gao, Y Ma, D Liu, JE Davis, NK Gabler, J Walker-Daniels, ME Spurlock, S Bordin, R Ashimine, RL Zollner, AC Boschero, J DeFuria, AC Belkina, M Jagannathan-Bogdan, J Snyder-Cappione, JD Carr, YR Nersesova, D Markham, KJ Strissel, AA Watkins, M Zhu, MY Donath, EC Drobny, EC Abramson, G Baumann, K Duvel, JL Yecies, S Menon, P Raman, AI Lipovsky, AL Souza, E Triantafellow, Q Ma, R Gorski, S Cleaver, MJ Ebstein W, JA Ehses, A Perren, E Eppler, P Ribaux, JA Pospisilik, R Maor-Cahn, X Gueripel, H Ellingsgaard, MK Schneider, G Biollaz, SC Eisenbarth, A Williams, OR Colegio, H Meng, T Strowig, A Rongvaux, J Henao-Mejia, CA Thaiss, S Joly, DG Gonzalez, E Erbay, VR Babaev, L Makowski, KN Charles, ME Snitow, S Fazio, MF Linton, B Everts, E Amiel, AM Smith, WY Lam, V Redmann, TC Freitas, R Faggioni, G Fantuzzi, C Gabay, A Moser, CA Dinarello, KR Feingold, C Grunfeld, R Fan, A Toubal, S Goni, K Drareni, Z Huang, F Alzaid, R Ballaire, P Ancel, N Liang, A Damdimopoulos, M Soued, I Staprans, LA Gavin, ME Donahue, BJ Huang, AH Moser, R Gulli, R Feinstein, H Kanety, MZ Papa, B Lunenfeld, A Karasik, M Feuerer, L Herrero, D Cipolletta, A Naaz, J Wong, A Nayer, AB Goldfine, C Benoist, S Shoelson, B Feve, JP Bastard, K Fischer, HH Ruiz, K Jhun, B Finan, DJ Oberlin, V van der Heide, AV Kalinovich, N Petrovic, Y Wolf, C Clemmensen, MJ Fox, JF Kuzma, WT Washam, MD Fullerton, GR Steinberg, JD Schertzer, R Fucho, CZ Gorgun, G Tuncman, Y Furusawa, Y Obata, S Fukuda, TA Endo, G Nakato, D Takahashi, Y Nakanishi, C Uetake, K Kato, T Kato, JJ Fuster, MA Zuriaga, D Thi-Minh Ngo, MG Farb, T Aprahamian, TP Yamaguchi, N Gokce, K Walsh, S Galic, S Sikkema, K Marcinko, CR Walkley, D Izon, J Honeyman, ZP Chen, BJ van Denderen, Z Gao, D Hwang, F Bataille, M Lefevre, D York, MJ Quon, J Ye, MR Ghazarian, S X, MK Nojr, H Luck, K Zeng, H Lei, S Tsai, SA Schroer, YJ Park, MHY Chng, L Shen, JA D'Angelo, P Horton, WC Chapman, D Brockmeier, M Woo, EG Engleman, O Adeyi, N Hirano, T Jin, AJ Gehring, S Winer, DA Winer, B Ghesquiere, BW Wong, A Kuchnio, P Carmeliet, B Gonzalez-Teran, N Matesanz, I Nikolic, MA Verdugo, V Sreeramkumar, L Hernandez-Cosido, A Mora, G Crainiciuc, ML Saiz, E Bernardo, TE Graham, Q Yang, M Bluher, A Hammarstedt, TP Ciaraldi, RR Henry, CJ Wason, A Oberbach, PA Jansson, U Smith, EA Green, RA Flavell, ME Griffin, MJ Marcucci, GW Cline, K Bell, N Barucci, D Lee, LJ Goodyear, EW Kraegen, GI Shulman, FX Hausberger, B Hellman, L Helson, E Carswell, E Elinav, EC Hett, LH Slater, KG Mark, T Kawate, BG Monks, A Stutz, E Latz, DT Hung, AA Hill, W Reid Bolus, AH Hasty, J Hirosumi, L Chang, KT Uysal, K Maeda, EG Hong, HJ Ko, YR Cho, Z Ma, TY Yu, RH Friedline, E Kurt-Jones, R Finberg, MA Fischer, P Arner, JF Caro, RL Atkinson, BM Spiegelman, DL Murray, LN Choy, P Peraldi, A Budavari, R Ellis, NS Shargill, J Huang, N Liao, QP Huang, ZF Xie, JY Huang, MT Chiang, SF Yet, LY Chau, A Ichimura, A Hirasawa, O Poulain-Godefroy, A Bonnefond, T Hara, L Yengo, I Kimura, A Leloire, N Liu, K Iida, WKE Ip, N Hoshi, DS Shouval, S Snapper, R Medzhitov, CO Jacob, S Aiso, SA Michie, HO McDevitt, H Acha-Orbea, AB Jenkins, LH Storlien, DJ Chisholm, AK Jha, A Sergushichev, V Lampropoulou, Y Ivanova, E Loginicheva, K Chmielewski, KM Stewart, J Ashall, Y Ji, S Sun, A Xu, L Yang, KS Lam, B Gao, S Kersten, L Qi, AB Johnson, M Argyraki, JC Thow, BG Cooper, G Fulcher, R Taylor, FR Jornayvaz, AL Birkenfeld, MJ Jurczak, S Kanda, BA Guigni, DC Jiang, D Zhang, HY Lee, VT Samuel, D Jullien, JF Tanti, SJ Heydrick, N Gautier, T Gremeaux, E Van Obberghen, Y Le Marchand-Brustel, H Kaneto, Y Nakatani, T Miyatsuka, D Kawamori, TA Matsuoka, M Matsuhisa, Y Kajimoto, H Ichijo, Y Yamasaki, M Hori, R Hemi, PA Kern, M Saghizadeh, JM Ong, RJ Bosch, R Deem, RB Simsolo, T Higashimori, SY Park, H Choi, J Dong, YJ Kim, HL Noh, G Cline, YB Kim, JK Kim, JJ Fillmore, MJ Sunshine, B Albrecht, DW Kim, ZX Liu, TJ Soos, WR O'Brien, A Kleinridders, D Schenten, AC Konner, BF Belgardt, J Mauer, T Okamura, FT Wunderlich, JC Bruning, D Kolodin, N van Panhuys, AM Magnuson, CM Miller, A Wagers, RN Germain, D Mathis, E Kopp, S Ghosh, A Kosteli, E Sugaru, G Haemmerle, JF Martin, J Lei, R Zechner, V Kothari, JA Galdo, ST Mathews, M Koulmanda, M Bhasin, Z Awdeh, A Qipo, Z Fan, D Hanidziar, P Putheti, H Shi, E Csizuadia, TA Libermann, M Kratz, BR Coats, KB Hisert, D Hagman, V Mutskov, E Peris, KQ Schoenfelt, JN Kuzma, I Larson, PS Billing, H Kwon, S Laurent, Y Tang, H Zong, P Vemulapalli, JE Pessin, GI Lancaster, MA Febbraio, CH Lang, C Dobrescu, JY Lee, HS Youn, WH Lee, L Zhao, N Sizemore, DH Hwang, MW Lee, JI Odegaard, L Mukundan, Y Qiu, AB Molofsky, JC Nussbaum, K Yun, RM Locksley, AP Petkova, JG Granneman, M Li, DH Kim, PL Tsenovoy, SJ Peterson, R Rezzani, LF Rodella, WS Aronow, S Ikehara, NG Abraham, P Li, M Lu, G Bandyopadhyay, D Oh, T Imamura, AM Johnson, D Sears, Z Shen, B Cui, Z Li, MJ Soloski, AM Diehl, H Liang, B Yin, H Zhang, S Zhang, Q Zeng, J Wang, X Jiang, L Yuan, CY Wang, PR Ling, BR Bistrian, B Mendez, NW Istfan, AE Locke, B Kahali, SI Berndt, AE Justice, TH Pers, FR Day, C Powell, S Vedantam, ML Buchkovich, J Yang, S Loffreda, SQ Yang, HZ Lin, CL Karp, ML Brengman, DJ Wang, AS Klein, GB Bulkley, C Bao, PW Noble, JW Lowenthal, DW Ballard, E Bohnlein, WC Greene, JL Bodzin, AR Saltiel, SM Deyoung, L Lynch, K Maedler, P Sergeev, F Ris, J Oberholzer, HI Joller-Jemelka, GA Spinas, N Kaiser, PA Halban, JR Mahoney, BA Beutler, N Le Trang, W Vine, Y Ikeda, M Kawakami, PD Miles, OM Romeo, K Higo, A Cohen, K Rafaat, JM Olefsky, HE Liang, SJ Van Dyken, LE Cheng, A Mohapatra, M Monetti, MC Levin, MJ Watt, MP Sajan, S Marmor, BK Hubbard, RD Stevens, JR Bain, CB Newgard, RV Farese, DL Morris, JL Delproposto, KE Oatmen, LM Geletka, G Martinez-Santibanez, R Mounier, M Theret, L Arnold, S Cuvellier, L Bultot, O Goransson, N Sanz, A Ferry, K Sakamoto, M Foretz, J An, MJ Muehlbauer, LF Lien, AM Haqq, SH Shah, M Arlotto, CA Slentz, X Cui, J Mwangi, T David, F Brombacher, S Nishimura, I Manabe, M Nagasaki, K Eto, H Yamashita, M Ohsugi, M Otsu, K Hara, K Ueki, S Sugiura, S Takaki, J Sugita, K Yoshimura, I Komuro, LA O'Neill, DG Hardie, DY Oh, S Talukdar, EJ Bae, H Morinaga, W Fan, WJ Lu, A Oliff, D Defeo-Jones, M Boyer, D Martinez, D Kiefer, G Vuocolo, A Wolfe, SH Socher, EA Oral, SM Reilly, AV Gomez, R Meral, L Butz, N Ajluni, TL Chenevert, E Korytnaya, AH Neidert, R Hench, L Osborn, S Kunkel, GJ Nabel, N Ouchi, A Higuchi, K Ohashi, Y Oshima, R Shibata, Y Akasaki, A Shimono, U Ozcan, Q Cao, E Yilmaz, AH Lee, NN Iwakoshi, E Ozdelen, C Gorgun, LH Glimcher, J Palmblad, D Hallberg, L Engstedt, N Pamir, NC Liu, A Irwin, L Becker, Y Peng, GE Ronsein, KE Bornfeldt, JS Duffield, JW Heinecke, SH Park, Z Liu, Y Sui, RN Helsley, B Zhu, DK Powell, C Zhou, P Pekala, MD Lane, MC Petersen, AK Madiraju, BM Gassaway, M Marcel, AR Nasiri, G Butrico, A Abulizi, XM Zhang, P Plomgaard, K Bouzakri, R Krogh-Madsen, B Mittendorfer, JR Zierath, BK Pedersen, CP Fischer, T Ibfelt, G van Hall, X Tian, RD Palmiter, D Rabinowitz, KL Zierler, PJ Randle, PB Garland, CN Hales, EA Newsholme, ME Rausch, S Weisberg, P Vardhana, DV Tortoriello, RM Raymond, JM Harkema, TE Emerson, SH Chiang, SJ Decker, M Uhm, MJ Larsen, JR Rubin, J Mowers, NM White, I Hochberg, C Reinhard, B Shamoon, V Shyamala, LT Williams, RR Ricardo-Gonzalez, A Red Eagle, H Jouihan, CR Morel, JE Heredia, D Wu, G Sabio, M Das, Z Zhang, JY Jun, T Barrett, RJ Davis, WT Garvey, AJ Scheen, N Esser, N Paquot, H Sell, C Habich, J Eckel, CN Serhan, C Serra, M Federici, A Buongiorno, MI Senni, S Morelli, E Segratella, M Pascuccio, C Tiveron, E Mattei, L Tatangelo, B Shan, X Wang, Y Wu, C Xu, Z Xia, J Dai, M Shao, F Zhao, S He, D Shungin, TW Winkler, DC Croteau-Chonka, T Ferreira, R Magi, RJ Strawbridge, N Silswal, AK Singh, B Aruna, S Mukhopadhyay, NZ Ehtesham, PM Smith, MR Howitt, N Panikov, M Michaud, CA Gallini, YM Bohlooly, JN Glickman, WS Garrett, RG Snodgrass, S Huang, IW Choi, JC Rutledge, D Artis, SC Sookoian, C Gonzalez, CJ Pirola, O Spadaro, CD Camell, L Bosurgi, KY Nguyen, YH Youm, CV Rothlin, VD Dixit, M Spite, J Claria, JJ Spitzer, K Meszaros, JL Barlow, JP Mizgerd, JM Stephens, CM Steppan, ST Bailey, S Bhat, EJ Brown, RR Banerjee, CM Wright, HR Patel, RS Ahima, MA Lazar, T Koenen, B van Tits, JA van Diepen, SA van den Berg, PC Rensen, PJ Voshol, MH Zaki, FL van de Veerdonk, D Perera, GA Neale, GJ Hooiveld, I Vroegrijk, ME Shaul, G Bennett, AS Greenberg, MS Obin, J Szendroedi, T Yoshimura, E Phielix, C Koliaki, M Marcucci, T Jelenik, J Muller, C Herder, P Nowotny, NA Talbot, CP Wheeler-Jones, ME Cleasby, D Li, J Xu, J McNelis, Q Yan, Y Zhu, S Tanaka, S Inoue, F Isoda, M Waseda, M Ishihara, T Yamakawa, A Sugiyama, Y Takamura, K Okuda, GM Tannahill, AM Curtis, J Adamik, EM Palsson-McDermott, AF McGettrick, G Goel, C Frezza, NJ Bernard, B Kelly, NH Foley, DC Thurmond, E Oh, RA Miller, E Tsaousidou, L Paeger, M Pal, CM Wunderlich, H Bronneke, U Collienne, B Hampel, M Schmidt-Supprian, G Solinas, F Urano, A Bertolotti, P Chung, HP Harding, D Ron, SM Wiesbrock, MW Marino, T Van der Poll, JA Romijn, E Endert, JJ Borm, HR Buller, HP Sauerwein, B Vandanmagsar, A Ravussin, JE Galgani, K Stadler, RL Mynatt, E Ravussin, JR Vane, J Ventre, T Doebber, M Wu, K MacNaul, K Stevens, M Pasparakis, G Kollias, DE Moller, G Waeber, J Delplanque, C Bonny, V Mooser, M Steinmann, C Widmann, A Maillard, J Miklossy, C Dina, EH Hani, R Wang, DR Green, SP Weisberg, D McCann, M Desai, M Rosenbaum, RL Leibel, H Wen, D Gris, Y Lei, S Jha, L Zhang, MT Huang, WJ Brickey, JP Ting, I Wernstedt Asterholm, C Tao, TS Morley, QA Wang, F Delgado-Lopez, ZV Wang, PP Wadia, J Yantha, G Paltser, H Tsui, P Wu, MG Davidson, MN Alonso, Y Chan, D Truong, J Bahrami, R Dorfman, Y Wang, J Zielenski, F Mastronardi, S Boura-Halfon, N Cortese, Z Haimon, H Sar Shalom, Y Kuperman, V Kalchenko, A Brandis, E David, Y Segal-Hayoun, SC Woods, DP Begg, M Xie, Y Yu, R Kang, S Zhu, L Zeng, X Sun, M Yang, TR Billiar, H Wang, H Xu, GT Barnes, G Tan, D Yang, CJ Chou, J Sole, A Nichols, JS Ross, LA Tartaglia, H Yan, Y Gao, H Yang, JM Gimble, F Greenway, ES Calay, J Fan, A Arduini, RC Kunz, SP Gygi, A Yalcin, S Fu, N Mody, F Preitner, OD Peroni, JM Zabolotny, K Kotani, L Quadro, BB Kahn, MM Yore, I Syed, PM Moraes-Vieira, T Zhang, MA Herman, EA Homan, RT Patel, S Chen, C Yu, Y Chen, R Bergeron, SW Cushman, GJ Cooney, N Konstantopoulos, K Zhang, RJ Kaufman, X Zhang, G Zhang, H Bai, T Zhao, M Hou, M Xia, Q Wang, H Zhu, Y Xiao, Z Tang, J Ma, W Ling, Y Zhao, Z Jiang, E Delgado, H Li, H Zhou, W Hu, M Perez-Basterrechea, A Janostakova, Q Tan, R Zhou, A Tardivel, B Thorens, I Choi, J Tschopp Show 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Highly ordered interactions between immune and metabolic responses are evolutionarily conserved and paramount for tissue and organismal health. Disruption of these interactions underlies the emergence Show more
Highly ordered interactions between immune and metabolic responses are evolutionarily conserved and paramount for tissue and organismal health. Disruption of these interactions underlies the emergence of many pathologies, particularly chronic non-communicable diseases such as obesity and diabetes. Here, we examine decades of research identifying the complex immunometabolic signaling networks and the cellular and molecular events that occur in the setting of altered nutrient and energy exposures and offer a historical perspective. Furthermore, we describe recent advances such as the discovery that a broad complement of immune cells play a role in immunometabolism and the emerging evidence that nutrients and metabolites modulate inflammatory pathways. Lastly, we discuss how this work may eventually lead to tangible therapeutic advancements to promote health. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2017.08.009
review
Wang L, Yin H, Jabed MA +7 more · 2017 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Five heteroleptic tris-diimine ruthenium(II) complexes [RuL(N^N)2](PF6)2 (where L is 3,8-di(benzothiazolylfluorenyl)-1,10-phenanthroline and N^N is 2,2'-bipyridine (bp Show more
Five heteroleptic tris-diimine ruthenium(II) complexes [RuL(N^N)2](PF6)2 (where L is 3,8-di(benzothiazolylfluorenyl)-1,10-phenanthroline and N^N is 2,2'-bipyridine (bpy) (1), 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) (2), 1,4,8,9-tetraazatriphenylene (tatp) (3), dipyrido[3,2-a:2',3'-c]phenazine (dppz) (4), or benzo[i]dipyrido[3,2-a:2',3'-c]phenazine (dppn) (5), respectively) were synthesized. The influence of π-conjugation of the ancillary ligands (N^N) on the photophysical properties of the complexes was investigated by spectroscopic methods and simulated by density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT. Their ground-state absorption spectra were characterized by intense absorption bands below 350 nm (ligand L localized 1π,π* transitions) and a featureless band centered at ∼410 nm (intraligand charge transfer (1ILCT)/1π,π* transitions with minor contribution from metal-to-ligand charge transfer (1MLCT) transition). For complexes 4 and 5 with dppz and dppn ligands, respectively, broad but very weak absorption (ε < 800 M-1 cm-1) was present from 600 to 850 nm, likely emanating from the spin-forbidden transitions to the triplet excited states. All five complexes showed red-orange phosphorescence at room temperature in CH2Cl2 solution with decreased lifetimes and emission quantum yields, as the π-conjugation of the ancillary ligands increased. Transient absorption (TA) profiles were probed in acetonitrile solutions at room temperature for all of the complexes. Except for complex 5 (which showed dppn-localized 3π,π* absorption with a long lifetime of 41.2 μs), complexes 1-4 displayed similar TA spectral features but with much shorter triplet lifetimes (1-2 μs). Reverse saturable absorption (RSA) was demonstrated for the complexes at 532 nm using 4.1 ns laser pulses, and the strength of RSA decreased in the order: 2 ≥ 1 ≈ 5 > 3 > 4. Complex 5 is particularly attractive as a broadband reverse saturable absorber due to its wide optical window (430-850 nm) and long-lived triplet lifetime in addition to its strong RSA at 532 nm. Complexes 1-5 were also probed as photosensitizing agents for in vitro photodynamic therapy (PDT). Most of them showed a PDT effect, and 5 emerged as the most potent complex with red light (EC50 = 10 μM) and was highly photoselective for melanoma cells (selectivity factor, SF = 13). Complexes 1-5 were readily taken up by cells and tracked by their intracellular luminescence before and after a light treatment. Diagnostic intracellular luminescence increased with increased π-conjugation of the ancillary N^N ligands despite diminishing cell-free phosphorescence in that order. All of the complexes penetrated the nucleus and caused DNA condensation in cell-free conditions in a concentration-dependent manner, which was not influenced by the identity of N^N ligands. Although the mechanism for photobiological activity was not established, complexes 1-5 were shown to exhibit potential as theranostic agents. Together the RSA and PDT studies indicate that developing new agents with long intrinsic triplet lifetimes, high yields for triplet formation, and broad ground-state absorption to near-infrared (NIR) in tandem is a viable approach to identifying promising agents for these applications. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.6b02624
Biometal
Zhang DY, Zheng Y, Zhang H +8 more · 2017 · Nanoscale · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
Nanohybrids can in most cases kill cancer cells more efficiently as compared with free photosensitizers. In this work, we constructed nanohybrid Ru1@CDs composed of carbon nanodots (CDs) and a phospho Show more
Nanohybrids can in most cases kill cancer cells more efficiently as compared with free photosensitizers. In this work, we constructed nanohybrid Ru1@CDs composed of carbon nanodots (CDs) and a phosphorescent Ru(ii) complex (Ru1) for one- and two-photon photodynamic therapy of cancer. The photosensitizer and imaging agent Ru1 is decorated onto the nanocarrier CDs covalently. Ru1 and Ru1@CDs can penetrate into cancer cells through an energy-dependent mechanism and endocytosis, respectively. Both Ru1 and Ru1@CDs are capable of lysosome-targeted phosphorescence imaging and photodamage under either 450 nm (one-photon) or 810 nm (two-photon) excitation. Conjugation with CDs can increase the cellular uptake efficacy of Ru1. Mechanism investigations show that both Ru1 and Ru1@CDs can induce apoptosis through generation of reactive oxygen species and cathepsin-initiated apoptotic signaling pathways. Upon two-photon excitation, Ru1@CDs show better penetrability, as well as higher inhibitory effects on cancer cell growth in both 2D cell and 3D multicellular tumor spheroid models. Our work provides an effective strategy for the construction of multifunctional imaging and phototherapeutic nanohybrids for the treatment of cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/C7NR05349E
Biometal
Nomula R, Wu X, Zhao J +1 more · 2017 · Materials Science and Engineering: C · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Two coumarin based RuII-polyimine complexes (Ru-1 and Ru-2) showing intense absorption of visible light and long-lived triplet excited states (~12-15μs) were used for study of the interacti Show more
Two coumarin based RuII-polyimine complexes (Ru-1 and Ru-2) showing intense absorption of visible light and long-lived triplet excited states (~12-15μs) were used for study of the interaction with DNA. The binding of the complexes with CT-DNA were studied by UV-vis, fluorescence and time-resolved nanosecond transient absorption (ns-TA) spectroscopy. The results suggesting that the complexes interact with CT-DNA by intercalation mode of binding, showing the binding constants (Kb) 6.47×104 for Ru-1 and 5.94×104 M-1 for Ru-2, in contrast no such results were found for Ru-0. The nanosecond transient absorption spectra of these systems in the presence of CT-DNA showing a clear perturbation in the bleaching region was observed compare to buffer alone. Visible light photoirradiation DNA cleavage was investigated for these complexes by treating with the supercoiled pUC19 DNA and irradiated at 450nm. The reactive species produced upon irradiation of current agents is singlet oxygen (1O2), which results in the generation of other reactive oxygen species (ROS). The complexes shown efficient cleavage activity, converted complete supercoiled DNA to nicked circular at as low as 20μM concentration in 30min of light irradiation time. Significant amount of linear form was generated by Ru-1 at the same conditions. Even though Ru-0 has significant 1O2 quantum yield but shown lower cleavage activity compared to other two analogs is due the miserable interaction (binding) with DNA. The cytotoxicity in vitro of the complexes toward HeLa, BEL-7402 and MG-63 cells was assessed by MTT assay. The cellular uptake was observed on BEL-7402 cells under fluorescence microscope. The complexes shown appreciable cytotoxicity towards the cancer cell lines. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.msec.2017.05.123
Biometal