Ruthenium(II) complexes are currently considered a viable alternative to the widely used platinum complexes as efficient anticancer agents. We herein present the synthesis and characterization of half Show more
Ruthenium(II) complexes are currently considered a viable alternative to the widely used platinum complexes as efficient anticancer agents. We herein present the synthesis and characterization of half-sandwich ruthenium compounds with the general formula [Ru( p-cymene)(L-N,N)Cl][CF3SO3] (L = 3,6-di-2-pyridyl-1,2,4,5-tetrazine (1) 6,7-dimethyl-2,3-bis(pyridin-2-yl)quinoxaline (2)), which have been synthesized by substitution reactions from the precursor dimer [Ru( p-cymene)(Cl)(μ-Cl)]2 and were characterized by elemental analysis, mass spectrometry, 1H NMR, UV-vis, and IR spectroscopy, conductivity measurements, and cyclic voltammetry. The molecular structure for complex 2 was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The cytotoxic activity of these compounds was evaluated against human tumor cells, namely ovarian carcinoma A2780 and breast MCF7 and MDAMB231 adenocarcinoma cells, and against normal primary fibroblasts. Whereas the cytotoxic activity of 1 is moderate, IC50 values found for 2 are among the lowest previously reported for Ru( p-cymene) complexes. Both compounds present no cytotoxic effect in normal human primary fibroblasts when they are used at the IC50 concentration in A2780 and MCF7 cancer cells. Their antiproliferative capacity is associated with a combined mechanism of apoptosis and autophagy. A strong interaction with DNA was observed for both with a binding constant value of the same magnitude as that of the classical intercalator [Ru(phen)2(dppz)]2+. Both complexes bind to human serum albumin with moderate to strong affinity, with conditional binding constants (log Kb) of 4.88 for complex 2 and 5.18 for complex 1 in 2% DMSO/10 mM Hepes pH7.0 medium. The acute toxicity was evaluated in zebrafish embryo model using the fish embryo acute toxicity test (FET). Remarkably, our results show that compounds 1 and 2 are not toxic/lethal even at extremely high concentrations. The novel compounds reported herein are highly relevant antitumor metallodrug candidates, given their in vitro cytotoxicity toward cancer cells and the lack of in vivo toxicity. Show less
2018 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-21
A series of cationic gold(i) pyrazole complexes were synthesised regioselectively and in excellent yields and tested against human liver cancer cell lines HepG2.
Abstract Significance: Mitochondria are the energetic, metabolic, redox, and information signaling centers of the cell. Substrate pressure, mitochondrial network dynamics, and cristae morphology Show more
Abstract Significance: Mitochondria are the energetic, metabolic, redox, and information signaling centers of the cell. Substrate pressure, mitochondrial network dynamics, and cristae morphology state are integrated by the protonmotive force Δ p or its potential component, Δ Ψ , which are attenuated by proton backflux into the matrix, termed uncoupling. The mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCP1–5) play an eminent role in the regulation of each of the mentioned aspects, being involved in numerous physiological events including redox signaling. Recent Advances: UCP2 structure, including purine nucleotide and fatty acid (FA) binding sites, strongly support the FA cycling mechanism: UCP2 expels FA anions, whereas uncoupling is achieved by the membrane backflux of protonated FA. Nascent FAs, cleaved by phospholipases, are preferential. The resulting Δ p dissipation decreases superoxide formation dependent on Δ p . UCP-mediated antioxidant protection and its impairment are expected to play a major role in cell physiology and pathology. Moreover, UCP2-mediated aspartate, oxaloacetate, and malate antiport with phosphate is expected to alter metabolism of cancer cells. Critical Issues: A wide range of UCP antioxidant effects and participations in redox signaling have been reported; however, mechanisms of UCP activation are still debated. Switching off/on the UCP2 protonophoretic function might serve as redox signaling either by employing/releasing the extra capacity of cell antioxidant systems or by directly increasing/decreasing mitochondrial superoxide sources. Rapid UCP2 degradation, FA levels, elevation of purine nucleotides, decreased Mg 2+ , or increased pyruvate accumulation may initiate UCP-mediated redox signaling. Future Directions: Issues such as UCP2 participation in glucose sensing, neuronal (synaptic) function, and immune cell activation should be elucidated. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 29, 667–714. Show less
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
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
Ru(II) and Os(II) complexes of 2-pyridinecarbothioamide ligands were introduced as orally administrable anticancer agents (S.M. Meier, M. Hanif, Z. Adhireksan, V. Pichler, M. Novak, E. Jirkovsky, M.A. Show more
Ru(II) and Os(II) complexes of 2-pyridinecarbothioamide ligands were introduced as orally administrable anticancer agents (S.M. Meier, M. Hanif, Z. Adhireksan, V. Pichler, M. Novak, E. Jirkovsky, M.A. Jakupec, V.B. Arion, C.A. Davey, B.K. Keppler, C.G. Hartinger, Chem. Sci., 2013, 4, 1837-1846). In order to identify structure-activity relationships, a series of N-phenyl substituted pyridine-2-carbothiamides (PCAs) were obtained by systematically varying the substituents at the phenyl ring. The PCAs were then converted to their corresponding RuII(η6-p-cymene) complexes and characterized spectroscopically and by X-ray diffraction as well as in terms of stability in water and HCl. The cytotoxic activity of the PCA ligands and their respective organoruthenium compounds was evaluated in a panel of cell lines (HCT116, H460, SiHa and SW480). The lipophilic PCAs 1-4 showed cytotoxicity in the low micromolar range and 6 was the most potent compound of the series with an IC50 value of 1.1μM against HCT116 colon cancer cells. These observations were correlated with calculated octanol/water partition coefficient (clogP) data and quantitative estimated druglikeness. A similar trend as for the PCAs was found in their Ru complexes, where the complexes with more lipophilic ligands proved to be more cytotoxic in all tested cell lines. In general, the PCAs and their organoruthenium derivatives demonstrated excellent drug-likeness and cytotoxicity with IC50 values in the low micromolar range, making them interesting candidates for further development as orally active anticancer agents. Show less
Novel metal complexes have received great attention in the last decades due to their potential anticancer activity. Notably, ruthenium-based complexes have emerged as good alternative to the currently Show more
Novel metal complexes have received great attention in the last decades due to their potential anticancer activity. Notably, ruthenium-based complexes have emerged as good alternative to the currently used platinum-based drugs for cancer therapy, providing less toxicity and side effects to patients. Glioblastoma is an aggressive and invasive type of brain tumor and despite of advances is the field of neurooncology there is no effective treatment until now. Therefore, we sought to investigate the potential antiproliferative activity of phosphine-ruthenium-based complexes on human glioblastoma cell lines. Due to its octahedral structure as opposed to the square-planar geometry of platinum(II) compounds, ruthenium(II) complexes exhibit different structure-function relationship probably acting through a different mechanism from that of cisplatin beyond their ability to bind DNA. To better improve the pharmacological activity of metal complexes we hypothesized that neutron activation of ruthenium in the complexes would allow to decrease the effective concentration of the compound needed to kill tumor cells. Herein we report on the effect of unmodified and neutron activated phosphine ruthenium II complexes on glioblastoma cell lines carrying wild-type and mutated p53 tumor suppressor gene. Induction of apoptosis/authophagy as well as generation of reactive oxygen species were determined. The phosphine ruthenium II complexes tested were highly active against glioblastoma cell lines inducing cell death both through apoptosis and autophagy in a p53 independent fashion. Neutron activation of ruthenium compounds rendered them more active than their original counterparts suggesting a new strategy to improve the antitumor activity of these compounds. Show less
Elena Garralda, Rodrigo Dienstmann, Josep Tabernero · 2017 · American Society of Clinical Oncology educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual Meeting · added 2026-04-20
High drug attrition rates remain a critical issue in oncology drug development. A series of steps during drug development must be addressed to better understand the pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacody Show more
High drug attrition rates remain a critical issue in oncology drug development. A series of steps during drug development must be addressed to better understand the pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of novel agents and, thus, increase their probability of success. As available data continues to expand in both volume and complexity, comprehensive integration of PK and PD information into a robust mathematical model represents a very useful tool throughout all stages of drug development. During the discovery phase, PK/PD models can be used to identify and select the best drug candidates, which helps characterize the mechanism of action and disease behavior of a given drug, to predict clinical response in humans, and to facilitate a better understanding about the potential clinical relevance of preclinical efficacy data. During early drug development, PK/PD modeling can optimize the design of clinical trials, guide the dose and regimen that should be tested further, help evaluate proof of mechanism in humans, anticipate the effect in certain subpopulations, and better predict drug-drug interactions; all of these effects could lead to a more efficient drug development process. Because of certain peculiarities of immunotherapies, such as PK and PD characteristics, PK/PD modeling could be particularly relevant and thus have an important impact on decision making during the development of these agents. Show less
Two [Ru(phen)2 dppz]2+ derivatives (phen=1,10-phenantroline, dppz=dipyrido[3,2-a:2',3'-c]phenazine) with different functional groups on the dppz ligand [dppz-7,8-(OMe)2Show more
Two [Ru(phen)2 dppz]2+ derivatives (phen=1,10-phenantroline, dppz=dipyrido[3,2-a:2',3'-c]phenazine) with different functional groups on the dppz ligand [dppz-7,8-(OMe)2 (1), dppz-7,8-(OH)2 (2)] have been synthesized, characterized and investigated as photosensitizers (PSs) for photodynamic therapy (PDT) against cancer. Both complexes showed intense red phosphorescence and promising singlet oxygen (1 O2 ) quantum yields of 75 % (1) and 54 % (2) in acetonitrile. Complex 1 (logPo/w =-0.52, 2.4 nmol Ru per mg protein) was found to be more lipophilic, having also a higher cellular uptake efficiency compared to 2 (logPo/w =-0.20, 0.9 nmol Ru per mg protein). Complex 1 localized evenly in HeLa cells whereas 2, was mainly visualized in the cell membrane by confocal microscopy. In the dark, complex 1 (IC50 =36.5 μm) was found to be more toxic than complex 2 (IC50 >100 μm) on a HeLa cells monolayer. Importantly, in view of PDT applications, both complexes were found to be non-toxic in the dark towards multicellular HeLa spheroids (IC50 >100 μm). Upon one-photon irradiation (420 nm, 9.27 J cm-2 ), 1 exhibited higher phototoxicity (IC50 =3.1 μm) than 2 (IC50 =16.7 μm) on HeLa cell monolayers. When two-photon irradiation (800 nm, 9.90 J cm-2 ) was applied, only 1 (IC50 =9.5 μm) was found to be active toward HeLa spheroids. This study demonstrates that the functional group on the intercalative ligand has a strong influence on the cellular localization and anticancer activity of RuII polypyridyl complexes. Show less
A library of new bis-picolinamide ruthenium(III) dihalide complexes of the type [RuX2 L2 ] (X=Cl or I, L=picolinamide) have been synthesised and characterised. The complexes exhi Show more
A library of new bis-picolinamide ruthenium(III) dihalide complexes of the type [RuX2 L2 ] (X=Cl or I, L=picolinamide) have been synthesised and characterised. The complexes exhibit different picolinamide ligand binding modes, whereby one ligand is bound (N,N) and the other bound (N,O). Structural studies revealed a mixture of cis and trans isomers for the [RuCl2 L2 ] complexes but upon a halide exchange reaction to yield [RuI2 L2 ], only single trans isomers were detected. High cytotoxic activity against human cancer cell lines was observed, with the potencies of some complexes similar to or better than cisplatin. The conversion to [RuI2 L2 ] substantially increased the activity towards cancer cell lines by more than twelvefold. The [RuI2 L2 ] complexes displayed potent activity against the A2780cis (cisplatin-resistant human ovarian cancer) cell line, with a more than fourfold higher potency than cisplatin. Equitoxic activity was observed against normoxic and hypoxic cancer cells, which indicates the potential to eradicate both the hypoxic and aerobic fractions of solid tumours with similar efficiency. The activity of selected complexes against non-cancer ARPE-19 cells was also tested. The [RuI2 L2 ] complexes were found to be more potent than the [RuCl2 L2 ] analogues and also more selective towards cancer cells with a selectivity factor in excess of sevenfold. Show less
Liang Xu, Wei Wang, Jiabin Wu+6 more · 2017 · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America · National Academy of Sciences · added 2026-04-20
Alkylated DNA lesions, induced by both exogenous chemical agents and endogenous metabolites, interfere with the efficiency and accuracy of DNA replication and transcription. However, the molecular mec Show more
Alkylated DNA lesions, induced by both exogenous chemical agents and endogenous metabolites, interfere with the efficiency and accuracy of DNA replication and transcription. However, the molecular mechanisms of DNA alkylation-induced transcriptional stalling and mutagenesis remain unknown. In this study, we systematically investigated how RNA polymerase II (pol II) recognizes and bypasses regioisomeric O2-, N3-, and O4-ethylthymidine (O2-, N3-, and O4-EtdT) lesions. We observed distinct pol II stalling profiles for the three regioisomeric EtdT lesions. Intriguingly, pol II stalling at O2-EtdT and N3-EtdT sites is exacerbated by TFIIS-stimulated proofreading activity. Assessment for the impact of the EtdT lesions on individual fidelity checkpoints provided further mechanistic insights, where the transcriptional lesion bypass routes for the three EtdT lesions are controlled by distinct fidelity checkpoints. The error-free transcriptional lesion bypass route is strongly favored for the minor-groove O2-EtdT lesion. In contrast, a dominant error-prone route stemming from GMP misincorporation was observed for the major-groove O4-EtdT lesion. For the N3-EtdT lesion that disrupts base pairing, multiple transcriptional lesion bypass routes were found. Importantly, the results from the present in vitro transcriptional studies are well correlated with in vivo transcriptional mutagenesis analysis. Finally, we identified a minor-groove-sensing motif from pol II (termed Pro-Gate loop). The Pro-Gate loop faces toward the minor groove of RNA:DNA hybrid and is involved in modulating the translocation of minor-groove alkylated DNA template after nucleotide incorporation opposite the lesion. Taken together, this work provides important mechanistic insights into transcriptional stalling, lesion bypass, and mutagenesis of alkylated DNA lesions. Show less
Elucidation of the communication between metal complexes and cell membrane may provide useful information for rational design of metal-based anticancer drugs. Herein we synthesized a novel class of ru Show more
Elucidation of the communication between metal complexes and cell membrane may provide useful information for rational design of metal-based anticancer drugs. Herein we synthesized a novel class of ruthenium (Ru) complexes containing phtpy derivatives (phtpy = phenylterpyridine), analyzed their structure-activity relationship and revealed their action mechanisms. The result showed that, the increase in the planarity of hydrophobic Ru complexes significantly enhanced their lipophilicity and cellular uptake. Meanwhile, the introduction of nitro group effectively improved their anticancer efficacy. Further mechanism studies revealed that, complex (2c), firstly accumulated on cell membrane and interacted with death receptors to activate extrinsic apoptosis signaling pathway. The complex was then transported into cell cytoplasm through transferrin receptor-mediated endocytosis. Most of the intracellular 2c accumulated in cell plasma, decreasing the level of cellular ROS, inducing the activation of caspase-9 and thus intensifying the apoptosis. At the same time, the residual 2c can translocate into cell nucleus to interact with DNA, induce DNA damage, activate p53 pathway and enhance apoptosis. Comparing with cisplatin, 2c possesses prolonged circulation time in blood, comparable antitumor ability and importantly, much lower toxicity in vivo. Taken together, this study uncovers the role of membrane receptors in the anticancer actions of Ru complexes, and provides fundamental information for rational design of membrane receptor targeting anticancer drugs. Show less
2017 · Chemistry – A European Journal · Wiley · added 2026-05-21
AbstractGold complexes with N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands represent a promising class of metallodrugs for the treatment of cancer or infectious diseases. In this report, the synthesis and the b Show more
AbstractGold complexes with N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands represent a promising class of metallodrugs for the treatment of cancer or infectious diseases. In this report, the synthesis and the biological evaluation of halogen‐containing NHC‐AuI‐Cl complexes are described. The complexes 1 and 5 a–5 f displayed good cytotoxic activity against tumor cells, and cellular uptake studies suggested that an intact Au‐NHC fragment is essential for the accumulation of high amounts of both the metal and the NHC ligand. However, the bioavailability was negatively affected by serum components of the cell culture media and was influenced by likely transformations of the complex. One example (5 d) efficiently induced apoptosis in vincristine‐ and daunorubicin‐resistant P‐glycoprotein overexpressing Nalm‐6 leukemia cells. Cellular uptake studies with this compound showed that both the wild‐type and resistant Nalm‐6 cells accumulated comparable amounts of gold, indicating that the gold drug was not excreted by P‐glycoprotein or other efflux transporters. The effective inhibition of mammalian and bacterial thioredoxin reductases (TrxR) was confirmed for all of the gold complexes. Antibacterial screening of the gold complexes showed a particularly high activity against Gram‐positive strains, reflecting their high dependence on an intact Trx/TrxR system. This result is of particular interest as the inhibition of bacterial TrxR represents a relatively little explored mechanism of new anti‐infectives. Show less
Hypoxia inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1) orchestrates cellular adaptation to low oxygen and nutrient deprived environment and drives progression to malignancy in human solid cancers. Its canonical reg Show more
Hypoxia inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1) orchestrates cellular adaptation to low oxygen and nutrient deprived environment and drives progression to malignancy in human solid cancers. Its canonical regulation involves prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs), which in normoxia induce degradation, whereas in hypoxia allow stabilization of HIF-1. However, in certain circumstances HIF-1 regulation goes beyond the actual external oxygen levels and involves PHD-independent mechanisms. Here we gather and discuss the evidence on the non-canonical HIF-1 regulation, focusing in particular on the consequences of mitochondrial respiratory complexes damage on stabilization of this pleiotropic transcription factor. Show less
The rapid and modular synthesis of the aminophosphine core has been exploited as a tool for rapid development of antitumoral metallodrug candidates. Starting with a series of structurally diverse amin Show more
The rapid and modular synthesis of the aminophosphine core has been exploited as a tool for rapid development of antitumoral metallodrug candidates. Starting with a series of structurally diverse aminophosphines, all obtained in a single step from commercial amines, a family of Ru(ii)-cymene complexes have been generated and tested in vitro for anti-tumoral activity in a series of cell lines, including the platinum-resistant A2780R. Through this approach, Ru(ii)-aminophosphine complexes have been identified with the IC50 value range as low as 10-0.8 μM. Several biological assays were carried out to gain insight into the mechanism of action. Cell death by apoptosis and pH-independent action has been demonstrated. In addition, a selective cytotoxicity profile for tumoral cells over non-tumoral cells has been identified. Importantly, for the key candidates no loss of activity was observed when applied to the Pt-resistant A2780R, which highlights the potential utility of the bis-phospinoamine scaffold as an easily-tunable auxiliary ligand core in both drug discovery and subsequently a logical design of new anticancer metal-containing drugs. The complexes are characterised by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Show less
The synthesis and characterization of Pt(II) (1 and 2) and Ru(II) arene (3 and 4) or polypyridine (5 and 6) complexes is described. With the aim of having a functional group to form bioconjugates, one Show more
The synthesis and characterization of Pt(II) (1 and 2) and Ru(II) arene (3 and 4) or polypyridine (5 and 6) complexes is described. With the aim of having a functional group to form bioconjugates, one uncoordinated carboxyl group has been introduced in all complexes. Some of the complexes were selected for their potential in photodynamic therapy (PDT). The molecular structures of complexes 2 and 5, as well as that of the sodium salt of the 4'-(4-carboxyphenyl)-2,2':6',2″-terpyridine ligand (cptpy), were determined by X-ray diffraction. Different techniques were used to evaluate the binding capacity to model DNA molecules, and MTT cytotoxicity assays were performed against four cell lines. Compounds 3, 4, and 5 showed little tendency to bind to DNA and exhibited poor biological activity. Compound 2 behaves as bonded to DNA probably through a covalent interaction, although its cytotoxicity was very low. Compound 1 and possibly 6, both of which contain a cptpy ligand, were able to intercalate with DNA, but toxicity was not observed for 6. However, compound 1 was active in all cell lines tested. Clonogenic assays and apoptosis induction studies were also performed on the PC-3 line for 1. The photodynamic behavior for complexes 1, 5, and 6 indicated that their nuclease activity was enhanced after irradiation at λ = 447 nm. The cell viability was significantly reduced only in the case of 5. The different behavior in the absence or presence of light makes complex 5 a potential prodrug of interest in PDT. Molecular docking studies followed by molecular dynamics simulations for 1 and the counterpart without the carboxyl group confirmed the experimental data that pointed to an intercalation mechanism. The cytotoxicity of 1 and the potential of 5 in PDT make them good candidates for subsequent conjugation, through the carboxyl group, to "selected peptides" which could facilitate the selective vectorization of the complex toward receptors that are overexpressed in neoplastic cell lines. Show less
A series of novel ruthenium(ii) 2,2'-bipyridyl (bpy) and 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) derivatives containing PTA (1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane) or mPTA (N-methyl-1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane cat Show more
A series of novel ruthenium(ii) 2,2'-bipyridyl (bpy) and 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) derivatives containing PTA (1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane) or mPTA (N-methyl-1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane cation) have been synthesized and fully characterized. Three types of complexes have been obtained, neutral [Ru(N-N)(PTA)2Cl2] (1, N-N = bpy and 4, N-N = phen), monocationic [Ru(N-N)(PTA)3Cl][Cl] (2, N-N = bpy and 5, N-N = phen) and dicationic [Ru(N-N)(mPTA)Cl2][BF4]2 (3, N-N = bpy and 6, N-N = phen). The solid-state structures of four complexes have been determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The cytotoxicity of the complexes has been evaluated in vitro against U266 and RPMI human multiple myeloma cells. Show less