👤 Hannah C. Pigg

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Also published as: Hannah C Pigg,
articles
Paul D O'Dowd, Andres S Guerrero, Katelyn R Alley +9 more · 2024 · ACS Chemical Biology · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
It is well established that oxaliplatin, one of the three Pt(II) anticancer drugs approved worldwide, and phenanthriplatin, an important preclinical monofunctional Pt(II) anticancer drug, possess a di Show more
It is well established that oxaliplatin, one of the three Pt(II) anticancer drugs approved worldwide, and phenanthriplatin, an important preclinical monofunctional Pt(II) anticancer drug, possess a different mode of action from that of cisplatin and carboplatin, namely, the induction of nucleolar stress. The exact mechanisms that lead to Pt-induced nucleolar stress are, however, still poorly understood. As such, studies aimed at better understanding the biological targets of both oxaliplatin and phenanthriplatin are urgently needed to expand our understanding of Pt-induced nucleolar stress and guide the future design of Pt chemotherapeutics. One approach that has seen great success in the past is the use of Pt-click complexes to study the biological targets of Pt drugs. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of the first examples of click-capable phenanthriplatin complexes. Furthermore, through monitoring the relocalization of nucleolar proteins, RNA transcription levels, and DNA damage repair biomarker γH2AX, and by investigating their in vitro cytotoxicity, we show that these complexes successfully mimic the cellular responses observed for phenanthriplatin treatment in the same experiments. The click-capable phenanthriplatin derivatives described here expand the existing library of Pt-click complexes. Significantly they are suitable for studying nucleolar stress mechanisms and further elucidating the biological targets of Pt complexes. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.3c00607
DNA-binding Pt anticancer synthesis
Andres S. Guerrero, Paul D. O’Dowd, Hannah C. Pigg +3 more · 2023 · RSC Chemical Biology · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Pt(II) chemotherapeutic complexes have been used as predominant anticancer drugs for nearly fifty years. Currently there are three FDA-approved chemotherapeutic Pt(II) complexes: cisplatin, ca Show more
Pt(II) chemotherapeutic complexes have been used as predominant anticancer drugs for nearly fifty years. Currently there are three FDA-approved chemotherapeutic Pt(II) complexes: cisplatin, carboplatin, and oxaliplatin. Until recently, it was believed that all three complexes induced cellular apoptosis through the DNA damage response pathway. Studies within the last decade, however, suggest that oxaliplatin may instead induce cell death through a unique nucleolar stress pathway. Pt(II)-induced nucleolar stress is not well understood and further investigation of this pathway may provide both basic knowledge about nucleolar stress as well as insight for more tunable Pt(II) chemotherapeutics. Through a previous structure-function analysis, it was determined that nucleolar stress induction is highly sensitive to modifications at the 4-position of the 1,2-diaminocyclohexane (DACH) ring of oxaliplatin. Specifically, more flexible and less rigid substituents (methyl, ethyl, propyl) induce nucleolar stress, while more rigid and bulkier substituents (isopropyl, acetamide) do not. These findings suggest that a click-capable functional group can be installed at the 4-position of the DACH ring while still inducing nucleolar stress. Herein, we report novel click-capable azide-modified oxaliplatin mimics that cause nucleolar stress. Through NPM1 relocalization, fibrillarin redistribution, and γH2AX studies, key differences have been identified between previously studied click-capable cisplatin mimics and these novel click-capable oxaliplatin mimics. These complexes provide new tools to identify cellular targets and localization through post-treatment Cu-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition and may help to better understand Pt(II)-induced nucleolar stress. To our knowledge, these are the first reported oxaliplatin mimics to include an azide handle, and cis-[(1R,2R,4S) 4-methylazido-1,2-cyclohexanediamine]dichlorido platinum(II) is the first azide-functionalized oxaliplatin derivative to induce nucleolar stress. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D3CB00055A
Cu DNA-binding Pt anticancer
Andres S. Guerrero, Paul D. O’Dowd, Hannah C. Pigg +3 more · 2023 · RSC Chemical Biology · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
A novel click-capable oxaliplatin mimic as a tool to study Pt( ii )-induced nucleolar stress.
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d3cb00055a
1,2-diaminocyclohexane anticancer cancer carboplatin chemotherapeutics cisplatin diaminocyclohexane dna
Hannah C. Pigg, Matthew V. Yglesias, Emily C. Sutton +3 more · 2022 · ACS Chemical Biology · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
The properties of small molecule Pt(II) compounds that drive specific cellular responses are of interest due to their broad clinical use as chemotherapeutics as well as to provide a better mechanistic Show more
The properties of small molecule Pt(II) compounds that drive specific cellular responses are of interest due to their broad clinical use as chemotherapeutics as well as to provide a better mechanistic understanding of bioinorganic processes. The chemotherapeutic compound cisplatin causes cell death through DNA damage, while oxaliplatin may induce cell death through inhibition of ribosome biogenesis, also referred to as nucleolar stress induction. Previous work has found a subset of oxaliplatin derivatives that cause nucleolar stress at 24 h drug treatment. Here we report that these different Pt(II) derivatives exhibit a range of rates and degrees of global nucleolar stress induction as well as inhibition of rRNA transcription. Potential explanations for these variations include both the ring size and stereochemistry of the non-aquation-labile ligand. We observe that Pt(II) compounds containing a 6-membered ring show faster onset and a higher overall degree of nucleolar stress than those containing a 5-membered ring, and that compounds having the 1R,2R-stereoisomeric conformation show faster onset and a higher overall degree of stress than those having the 1S,2S-conformation. Pt(II) cellular accumulation and cellular Pt(II)-DNA adduct formation did not correlate with nucleolar stress induction, indicating that the effect is not due to global interactions. Together these results suggest that Pt(II) compounds induce nucleolar stress through a mechanism that likely involves one or a few key intermolecular interactions. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.2c00399
Pt