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⚗️ Metals 2487
▸ Metals — Platinum (109)
apoptosis (297)Pt (214)pt (24)ferroptosis (22)oxaliplatin (21)cisplatin (21)pyroptosis (7)necroptosis (6)transcription (6)carboplatin (5)transcription factors (5)transcriptional regulation (5)platinum (4)lead optimization (3)transcription regulation (3)metabolic adaptation (3)pt(ii) complexes (2)transcriptional regulatory interactions (2)ferroptosis induction (2)transcription initiation (2)transcription-coupled repair (2)adaptive binding (2)cellular adaptation (2)post-transcriptional regulation (2)pt(dach)methionine (1)transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (tc-ner) (1)triptolide (1)molecular optimization (1)pt(dach)cl4 (1)innate apoptotic immunity (1)pta (1)oligopeptides (1)transcription-coupled ner (1)ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (fsp1) (1)apoptotic cells (1)platinumbased (1)hptab (1)signaling-transcriptional mechanisms (1)oncogene transcription inhibition (1)pt2 (1)admet optimization (1)receptor (1)pten (1)platinum(ii) (1)chain-of-thought prompt engineering (1)tetrapeptides (1)apoptotic function (1)adaptive immune response (1)gpt-2 (1)platinum drugs (1)ptii complex (1)platinum complexes (1)transcriptomics (1)cell metabolism disruption (1)peptide (1)pt(s,s-dab) (1)pt(r,r-dab) (1)pt3(hptab) (1)estrogen receptor (1)transcriptional addiction (1)transcription stress (1)septicemia (1)optical spectroscopies (1)receptors (1)selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (ssri) (1)transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (1)pt(r,r-dach) (1)chiroptical response (1)diplatinum helicate (1)cyclometalated 1,3-bis(8-quinolyl) phenyl chloroplatinum(ii) (1)transcriptional activity (1)pt1 (1)disrupting a base pair (1)platinum-containing drugs (1)gpt-4 (1)transcriptional stalling (1)transcription inhibition (1)apoptotic (1)eukaryotic transcription (1)base pairing disruption (1)apoptosis-related disorders (1)coordination chemistry is not relevant, but bioinorganic and medicinal chemistry are related concepts (1)chatgpt (1)apoptosis induction (1)platinum(ii)-based (1)transcriptional activation (1)platinum-based compounds (1)inhibition of transcription factors (1)molecular descriptors (1)pt(dach)oxalato (1)polypeptide chains (1)pt(dach)cl2 (1)glp-1 receptor agonists (1)chiroptical applications (1)pt(s,s-dach) (1)cell-penetrating peptides (1)cysteine uptake (1)therapeutic optimization (1)shape description methods (1)transcription blockage (1)antiferroptotic (1)rna transcription (1)electronic absorption (1)cellular adaptation to hypoxia (1)ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (1)apoptosis evasion (1)phosphopeptide-based kinome analysis (1)anti-apoptotic (1)gpt (1)
▸ Metals — Cobalt (185)
coordination-chemistry (102)Co (64)coordination chemistry (55)colorectal cancer (19)computational biology (7)spectroscopy (7)computational chemistry (6)computational modeling (6)pharmacology (6)co (5)pharmacovigilance (5)cryo-electron microscopy (4)glucose (4)colon cancer (4)metal complexes (4)glycolysis (4)oncology (4)pharmacokinetics (4)conformational change (3)glycocalyx (3)oncometabolite (3)complex i (3)oncosis (3)oncogenesis (2)polypharmacology (2)in-silico (2)plant secondary metabolites (2)computational approaches (2)in silico (2)convolutional neural networks (2)complex iii (2)natural compounds (2)pharmacodynamics (2)mitochondrial complex i (2)aerobic glycolysis (2)oncogene (2)covid-19 (2)microviscosity (1)pharmacometabolomics (1)complex formation (1)redox control (1)fatty alcohols (1)influence on physicochemical properties (1)fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (1)convolutional neural network (1)conditional lethality (1)picolinic acid (1)sars-cov-1 (1)metabolic control (1)pharmacological inhibition (1)pharmacokinetic (1)therapeutic controversy (1)multicolor emission (1)co2 fixation (1)protein complex (1)oncogenes (1)recombination (1)confocal microscopy (1)metal-ligand cooperation (1)cell surface recognition (1)sarcoma (1)network pharmacology (1)covalent interaction (1)escherichia coli (1)cobalamin (1)reversible compartmentalization (1)oncogene promoter regions (1)cellular compartments (1)coulometric karl fischer apparatus (1)combinatorial treatment (1)heme-containing enzymes (1)coimmunoprecipitation assay (1)glycosphingolipids (1)comorbidities (1)glycolytic activity (1)computational metabolomics (1)conformational isomerization (1)constitutive induction (1)confocal imaging (1)alcoholic hepatitis (1)knowledge discovery (1)oncogenic mutation (1)cobaltocene (1)coordination (1)computational approach (1)inorganic compounds (1)toxicology (1)conformational stability (1)connectivity mapping (1)mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2 (1)pharmacokinetic analyses (1)membrane permeability comparison (1)computer models (1)pathological conditions (1)dna condensation (1)4-octyl-itaconate (4-oi) (1)glucose dependence (1)cockayne's syndrome (1)atomic force microscope (1)complex diseases (1)dna conformational distortion (1)computational prediction (1)health economics (1)viscometry (1)conformational transitions (1)anticoagulant (1)glycome (1)oncogenic pathways (1)mitochondrial quality control (1)spin-orbit coupling (1)cytosolic ca21 concentration (1)cobamide (1)glycobiology (1)coimmunoprecipitation (1)dual protein expansion microscopy (1)brightfield microscopy (1)complexes (1)fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (frap) (1)glucose deprivation resistance (1)physicochemical properties (1)cell-like compartments (1)expansion microscopy (1)anticoagulants (1)ascorbic acid (1)oncogenic signaling (1)collective intelligence (1)cordycepin (1)genetic encoding (1)co2 (1)coupled-cluster computations (1)atp-competitive inhibitors (1)non-covalent interaction (1)computational methods (1)conformational states (1)conformational transition (1)electronic health records (1)sars-cov-2 (1)computational models (1)pharmacodynamic (1)text encoder (1)social cognition (1)sensory nerve conduction velocity (1)covalent binding (1)oncogene-mediated cellular transformation (1)fluorescence microscopy (1)glycolysis pathway (1)electronic conductometry (1)conformational landscapes (1)inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (1)itaconate (1)co(terpy)2+ (1)nmr spectroscopy (1)computational analysis (1)inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (1)coenzyme q10 (1)cell communication (1)colony formation assay (1)physico-chemical mechanisms (1)recognition (1)glycolytic enzymes (1)systems pharmacology (1)atomic force microscopy (1)computational methodologies (1)oncogenic (1)click expansion microscopy (1)glycosylation (1)n-(2-picolyl)salicylimine (1)ewing sarcoma (1)computational study (1)anticoagulation (1)confocal laser scanning microscopy (1)immuno-oncology (1)genome conformation profiling (1)somatic comorbidities (1)uv-vis spectroscopy (1)in silico analysis (1)co-immunoprecipitation (1)caco-2 cell monolayers (1)scoping review (1)conformational switch (1)damage recognition (1)entity recognition (1)energy conversion (1)noncovalent interactions (1)computer analysis (1)
▸ Metals — Iron (60)
▸ Metals — Ruthenium (86)
Ru (41)drug discovery (27)drug-delivery (23)drug resistance (11)prodrug (9)drug-drug interactions (9)drugs (7)adverse drug reactions (7)structural biology (7)drug repurposing (6)drug delivery (5)drug (5)drug development (5)g-quadruplex dna (4)ru (4)protein structure (3)drug interactions (3)structural analysis (3)drug screening (3)drug-target interaction prediction (3)g-quadruplex (3)drug design (3)drug repositioning (2)metallodrugs (2)structural data (2)drug-target interaction (2)serum (1)structure-based virtual screening (1)recruitment (1)hexammineruthenium(iii) (1)drug testing (1)spectrum diagrams (1)drug therapy (1)drug safety monitoring (1)drug sensitivity and resistance testing (1)drug safety assessment (1)structure (1)structural insights (1)adverse drug reaction detection (1)drug sensitization (1)drug target (1)truncations (1)drug-drug interaction prediction (1)protein structure-function relationship (1)pyruvate (1)drug-drug interaction identification (1)phenotypic drug screening (1)spontaneous adverse drug reaction reports (1)structural basis (1)antiviral drug discovery (1)drug tolerance (1)green rust (1)structural modeling (1)small-molecule drugs (1)structural methods (1)drug-nutrient interactions (1)adverse drug events (1)computational drug discovery (1)metal-based drugs (1)structural rearrangement (1)protein structure analysis (1)virus (1)small-molecule oral drugs (1)targeted drug delivery (1)adverse drug reaction (1)chemical drugs (1)doxorubicin (1)drug resistance reduction (1)drug-likeness (1)drug interaction prediction (1)drug target identification (1)macromolecular structure determination (1)resorufin (1)drug interaction analysis (1)drug combinations (1)non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (nsaids) (1)structural bioinformatics (1)structure prediction (1)drug response (1)drug interaction screening (1)ruthenium(ii)-based (1)drug detection (1)structure-function analysis (1)metal-based drug (1)protocellular structures (1)drug interaction identification (1)
▸ Metals — Copper (63)
▸ Metals — Gold (19)
▸ Metals — Iridium (29)
▸ Metals — Others (17)
▸ Metals — Palladium (13)
▸ Metals — Zinc (5)
▸ Metals — Other (17)
🔬 Methods 1116
▸ Methods — Other experimental (213)
synthesis (244)ML (51)docking (23)natural language processing (12)in vitro (7)in vivo (6)morphological profiling (4)literature search (4)benchmarking (4)network analysis (4)image-based profiling (3)biochemical analysis (3)text analysis (3)bibliometric analysis (3)api (2)incites (2)vosviewer (2)experimental (2)theoretical studies (2)high-throughput screening (2)sequence analysis (2)information extraction (2)pubmed (2)cck-8 assay (2)statistics (2)lectin array (2)statistical approach (2)literature review (2)genetic (2)icite (2)lectin microarray (2)semantic search (2)data visualization (1)in vivo studies (1)target-based approaches (1)permeability measurement (1)gene expression profile (1)patch clamp (1)cnns (1)knockout mouse studies (1)cpg island methylator phenotype (1)in vitro models (1)immunoblot (1)bret2 (1)preclinical models (1)graph theory (1)gnns (1)passive rheology (1)nonequilibrium sensitivity analysis (1)ex vivo (1)multilayer network integration (1)inhibition assay (1)go analysis (1)experimental data analysis (1)caspase activity (1)nct (1)esm (1)web of science (1)gene expression microarray (1)uv light exposure (1)text2sql (1)decision-making (1)short tandem repeat profiling (1)in-vitro (1)analytical determination methods (1)perturbation (1)immunospecific antibodies (1)overexpression (1)mechanistic analysis (1)nuclease digestion (1)enzymatic reaction (1)excision assay (1)nuclear magnetic resonance (not explicitly mentioned but implied through study of variants) (1)pampa assay (1)experimental studies (1)null models (1)binding studies (1)clinical analysis (1)semi-supervised learning (1)efficacy analyses (1)supervised learning (1)electric field application (1)mouse model (1)estimates (1)isothermal calorimetry (1)rational design (1)learning to rank (1)gene expression analysis (1)fluorometry (1)octanol-aqueous shake-flask method (1)polypharmacy regimens (1)predictive models (1)xr-seq (1)graph learning (1)human studies (1)in vivo lung perfusion (1)merip-seq (1)uv-detection (1)atp hydrolysis (1)clinical methods (1)data processing (1)glovebox-bound apparatus (1)hoechst 33,258 staining (1)mutational analyses (1)semantic retrieval (1)solid-phase microextraction (1)immunization (1)pathscan array (1)quantitative phase behavior (1)natural bond orbital (nbo) analysis (1)ai (1)immunological analysis (1)cellular assays (1)synthetic biology tools (1)nanotherapeutic approaches (1)splicing regulation profiling (1)genome-wide screening (1)loss-of-function screens (1)histochemical staining (1)resazurin reduction assay (1)stopped-flow ph jump experiments (1)protein language model (1)experimental validation (1)matrix factorization (1)giao method (1)multi-head attention mechanism (1)rnns (1)phase ii trial (1)calorimetry (1)high throughput screening (1)trp emission (1)self-supervised learning (1)chemocentric approach (1)graph-based learning (1)tcga analysis (1)theoretical framework (1)machine-learning algorithms (1)ablation experiments (1)boolean logic (1)guanidine hydrochloride denaturation (1)ic50 index (1)statistical analysis (1)quantification (1)ensemble learning (1)in vitro study (1)relation search (1)relation extraction (1)image segmentation (1)genetic studies (1)genome-wide analysis (1)knockdown (1)ccsd(t) (1)biochemical characterization (1)performance evaluation (1)nbo 3.1 (1)rocplotter (1)mitoplast preparation (1)cryoem (1)entity annotation (1)modeling (1)systems engineering (1)database analysis (1)radiation exposure (1)prognostic tools (1)mouse models (1)nuclear magnetic resonance (1)proximity ligation assays (1)mp2(fc)/6–311 +  + (2d,2p) (1)personalized treatments (1)ncbi e-utilities (1)gradient boosting machines (1)kegg analysis (1)genetic algorithm (1)algorithms (1)experimental design (1)system-level/network analyses (1)visualized analysis (1)aimall (1)radiotherapy (1)laboratory methods (1)displacement assay (1)electrophoretic retardation measurements (1)seahorse platform (1)normoxia (1)mixture modeling (1)high-throughput (1)experimental methods (1)slot blot (1)magnetic tweezers (1)thermal denaturation (1)global genome ner (1)genetic profiling (1)mutation analysis (1)algorithm development (1)modelling (1)cell migration assay (1)methylome profiling (1)biochemical studies (1)patch clamping (1)umbrella review (1)zotero (1)immunoblotting (1)statistical methods (1)cellular models (1)miclip (1)fluorometric assay (1)enzymatic assays (1)genetic analysis (1)photophysical (1)biomedical information retrieval (1)logistic regression (1)in-vivo (1)mutational status analysis (1)
▸ Methods — Computational (31)
▸ Methods — Crystallography / Structure (4)
▸ Methods — Cell biology (21)
▸ Methods — Spectroscopy (19)
▸ Methods — Genomics / Omics (25)
▸ Methods — Mass spec / Chromatography (6)
▸ Methods — Clinical / Epidemiology (8)
▸ Methods — Electrochemistry (5)
▸ Methods — Other (1)
🎯 Targets 980
▸ Targets — Mitochondria (15)
▸ Targets — Other (157)
protein (58)enzyme (19)heme (11)gene expression (10)nucleus (9)genome (5)cardiolipin (5)enzymes (5)are (4)nucleolus (4)genetic variants (4)tfiih (4)lipids (4)signal transduction (4)cytoplasm (4)cellular metabolism (4)cell metabolism (3)cell surface (3)ribosome (3)metalloproteins (3)cells (3)cell (3)fumarate hydratase (2)dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (2)ubiquinone (2)stress response (2)tubulin (2)cytosol (2)polysulfides (2)cytochrome c oxidase (2)xpb (2)aif (2)genes (2)ribosome biogenesis (2)chromophore (1)none (1)substrates (1)clinical notes (1)acsl4 (1)protein phosphatase 2a (1)dpscs (1)albumin (1)tissues (1)trxr (1)substrate (1)platelet aggregation (1)tbk1 (1)metabolic phenotype (1)lab results (1)intracellular ph (1)sqr (1)cellular biochemistry (1)target (1)healthy cells (1)sting (1)gene targets (1)variants (1)three-way junction (1)heme-oxygenase1 (1)ddr1 (1)cajal bodies (1)target genes (1)upr (1)mif (1)heme a3 (1)nucleic acids (1)intracellular substrates (1)hydrogen sulfide (h2s) (1)mt1-mmp (1)gene (1)plasma proteins (1)adenine (1)metabolic signatures (1)nuclear foci (1)mscs (1)caspase cascade (1)p65 (1)dna synthesis (1)ddb2 (1)nuclear factor (1)hmga2 (1)ecm (1)diseases (1)spliceosomal proteins (1)neurons (1)smn protein (1)nadh/nad(p)h (1)rtk clusters (1)reactive species (1)metal (1)translation initiation (1)ligand (1)lipid droplet (1)metabolic enzymes (1)pkcd (1)protein kinases (1)peripheral nervous system (1)stem cells (1)cellular targets (1)metalloenzyme (1)chemical reactions (1)4ebp1 (1)procaspase 3 (1)ump synthase (1)rbx1 (1)literature-based evidence (1)ras (1)metabolic biomarkers (1)guanine (1)metal centers (1)ccr7 (1)cytochrome p450 2e1 (1)cell nucleus (1)lung tissue (1)ph (1)stress granules (1)erythrocytes (1)hexokinase 2 (1)nucleic acid (1)nitrogen species (1)four-way junction (1)nucleolar protein (1)p21 (1)mek1/2 (1)membrane potential (1)polysulfides (h2sn) (1)mek (1)annexin v (1)atp production (1)actin (1)traf5 (1)tme (1)cytoskeleton (1)proteoforms (1)cell cycle (1)p47phox (1)metabolome (1)cellular (1)aldoa (1)oxidants (1)zbp1 (1)cellular machines (1)atp (1)actin filaments (1)disease network (1)lipid damage (1)focal adhesions (1)p97 (1)protein sequence (1)xpc (1)whole cell (1)p38 (1)plectin (1)plasmids (1)propidium iodide (1)nadph oxidase 1 (nox1) (1)hdac enzymes (1)
▸ Targets — Nucleic acids (44)
▸ Targets — Membrane / Transport (15)
▸ Targets — Enzymes / Kinases (18)
▸ Targets — Transcription factors (5)
🦠 Diseases 880
▸ Diseases — Cancer (69)
▸ Diseases — Other (41)
▸ Diseases — Neurodegenerative (18)
▸ Diseases — Inflammatory / Immune (6)
▸ Diseases — Metabolic (5)
▸ Diseases — Cardiovascular (6)
▸ Diseases — Hepatic / Renal (8)
⚙️ Mechanisms 800
▸ Mechanisms — ROS / Redox (65)
▸ Mechanisms — Other (96)
cell cycle arrest (16)enzyme inhibition (12)phosphorylation (5)gene expression regulation (5)cell cycle regulation (4)persulfidation (3)detoxification (3)ligand dissociation (2)sequence variants (2)mechanism of action (2)resistance (2)inactivation (2)invasion inhibition (1)er stress responses (1)hormesis (1)invasiveness (1)epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition inhibition (1)oxygen-dependent metabolism (1)aquation (1)paracellular permeability (1)translation efficiency (1)denaturation (1)sequestration (1)oxidative post-translational modification (1)lipid metabolism (1)duplex unwinding (1)unfolded protein response (1)antioxidation (1)calcium regulation (1)radical formation (1)oxidative damage (1)splicing regulation (1)cell growth arrest (1)protein destabilization (1)multivalent interactions (1)protein phosphatase 2a modulation (1)protein dislocation (1)cell growth suppression (1)proteotoxic stress (1)protein rearrangements (1)p21 translation inhibition (1)gg-ner (1)pseudohypoxia (1)hypoxic response (1)electron shuttle (1)low-barrier hydrogen bond (1)kinase inhibition (1)synthetic lethality (1)stress responses (1)mutagenesis (1)subcellular relocalization (1)weak interactions (1)proton ejection (1)metabolic fuel selection (1)posttranslational modification (1)regulatory interactions (1)proton pumps (1)genetic regulation (1)protein unfolding (1)nucleolar homeostasis (1)ligand switch (1)ribosomopathies (1)oxidation-reduction (1)induced fit (1)localization (1)genetic mutation (1)mode of action (1)nucleolar stress response (1)cell killing capacity (1)ligand exchange (1)bond breaking (1)kinase activation (1)modulation (1)diadduct formation (1)cytoskeleton modulation (1)radical-mediated reaction (1)electron self-exchange (1)protein shuttling (1)pore formation (1)cellular metabolism regulation (1)nuclear export processes (1)ion selectivity (1)cell survival suppression (1)stabilization (1)cell damage (1)mitochondrial bioenergetics (1)gene therapy (1)cytochrome p450 2e1 inhibition (1)oxidative metabolic phenotype (1)phosphorylation regulation (1)aggregation (1)downregulation (1)glutamate exchange (1)acidosis (1)dysregulated gene expression (1)glycan expression (1)
▸ Mechanisms — Signaling (51)
▸ Mechanisms — Immune modulation (21)
▸ Mechanisms — DNA damage / Repair (5)
▸ Mechanisms — Epigenetic (18)
▸ Mechanisms — Cell death (7)
▸ Mechanisms — Protein interaction (14)
▸ Mechanisms — Metabolic rewiring (8)
🔗 Ligands 659
▸ Ligands — N-donor (25)
▸ Ligands — Heterocyclic (9)
▸ Ligands — C-donor / NHC (4)
▸ Ligands — S-donor (14)
▸ Ligands — O-donor (7)
▸ Ligands — Other (8)
▸ Ligands — P-donor (2)
▸ Ligands — Peptide / Protein (4)
▸ Ligands — Macrocyclic (3)
▸ Ligands — Polydentate (5)
🧠 Concepts 612
▸ Concepts — Other biomedical (178)
medicinal chemistry (122)photoactivated (27)cell biology (13)chemotherapy (11)metabolism (10)biochemistry (9)artificial intelligence (7)large language models (7)systems biology (6)information retrieval (5)precision medicine (5)gene regulation (5)data mining (5)chemoprevention (4)cheminformatics (4)therapeutic target (4)mitophagy (4)immunology (4)genetics (4)biomedical research (3)large language model (3)biomedical literature (3)hydrogen bonding (3)post-translational modifications (3)chemotherapy resistance (3)variant interpretation (3)immunometabolism (3)physiology (2)clinical practice (2)evidence extraction (2)biotransformation (2)metabolic regulation (2)physiological relevance (2)chemical biology (2)cell cycle progression (2)immunomodulation (2)biophysics (2)protein modification (2)biopharmaceutics (2)immunity (2)in vitro modeling (2)post-translational modification (2)targeted therapy (2)predictive modeling (2)therapy resistance (2)desiccant efficiency (1)multimodal data integration (1)stereochemistry (1)variant evaluation (1)epithelial-mesenchymal transition (1)metalloprotein (1)genetic screening (1)self-assembly (1)personalized therapy (1)protein function prediction (1)cellular mechanisms (1)protein targeting (1)evidence-based medicine (1)photophysics (1)protein modifications (1)translational research (1)paracellular transport (1)helicase mechanism (1)chemiosmosis (1)polarizability (1)nonequilibrium (1)genotype characterization (1)nuclear shape (1)nutrient dependency (1)metabolic engineering (1)interactome (1)therapies (1)probing (1)multiscale analysis (1)reactive species interactome (1)tissue-specific (1)pharmaceutics (1)knowledge extraction (1)metabolic activities (1)protein function (1)chemical ontology (1)proton delocalization (1)permeability (1)biomarkers (1)prediction tool (1)mechanisms of action (1)protein-ligand binding affinity prediction (1)short hydrogen bonds (1)chemical language models (1)biomedical informatics (1)organelle function (1)microbiome (1)pathogenesis (1)mechanistic framework (1)biosignatures (1)cellular stress response (1)ion-selective electrodes (1)multimodal fusion (1)gasotransmitter (1)carbon metabolism (1)bioengineering (1)ion association (1)enzyme mechanism (1)symmetry breaking (1)micropolarity (1)genome stability (1)scaffold (1)global health (1)clinical implications (1)cellular neurobiology (1)mesh indexing (1)llm (1)therapeutic strategy (1)ner (1)dissipative behavior (1)enzymology (1)pretrained model (1)longevity (1)profiling approaches (1)multimodal information integration (1)therapeutic implications (1)astrobiology (1)protein sequence analysis (1)selective degradation (1)mechanical properties (1)biomedical literature search (1)metabolism regulation (1)extracellular vesicles (1)protein chemistry (1)foundation model (1)data science (1)low-barrier hydrogen bonds (1)variant detection (1)synthetic biology (1)therapeutic innovation (1)therapeutic targeting (1)metabolic dependencies (1)protein data bank (1)cellular biology (1)phenotypic screening (1)immunoengineering (1)database (1)thermochemistry (1)therapeutic approaches (1)medical subject heading (1)network biology (1)inorganic chemistry (1)immunoregulation (1)ageing (1)protein interaction networks (1)hormone mimics (1)therapeutics (1)chemotherapy efficacy (1)metabolite-mediated regulation (1)regulatory landscape (1)chemical informatics (1)mental well-being (1)personalized medicine (1)cell plasticity (1)protein science (1)metabolic therapy (1)cell polarity (1)bioavailability (1)biomedicine (1)cellular stress (1)network medicine (1)energy transduction (1)boron helices (1)nucleolar biology (1)sialic acid (1)organic solvent drying (1)phenotypic analysis (1)in vivo perfusion (1)polypharmacy (1)hyperglycemia (1)phenotypic screens (1)mechanobiology (1)nuclear organization (1)
▸ Concepts — Bioinorganic (7)
▸ Concepts — Thermodynamics / Kinetics (10)
▸ Concepts — Evolution / Origin of life (9)
▸ Concepts — Nanomedicine / Delivery (2)
▸ Concepts — Cancer biology (1)
📦 Other 583
▸ Other (169)
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1921 articles with selected tags
Chen Y, Lei W, Hou Y +5 more · 2015 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
A series of six Ru(arene) complexes, [(η(6)-p-cymene)Ru(dpb)(py-R)](2+) (1-6, dpb = 2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)benzoquinoxaline, py-R = 4-substituted pyridine, R = N(CH3)2, NH2, OCH3, H, COOCH3 and NO2), were Show more
A series of six Ru(arene) complexes, [(η(6)-p-cymene)Ru(dpb)(py-R)](2+) (1-6, dpb = 2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)benzoquinoxaline, py-R = 4-substituted pyridine, R = N(CH3)2, NH2, OCH3, H, COOCH3 and NO2), were synthesized and their photochemical and photobiological properties were compared in detail. The electron push/pull character of the R groups has a significant impact on both ligand photodissociation and (1)O2 generation of the complexes. The photoinduced DNA covalent binding capabilities increase from 1 to 6 under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions, and DNA photocleavage occurs simultaneously in aerobic environments. 4 has the most potent phototoxicity against human lung carcinoma A549 cells among the examined complexes. The substituent effect may be ascribed to the influences of the R groups on the energy levels of (3)MC and (3)MLCT states as well as the energy gaps between (3)MC, (3)MLCT and dpb-based (3)IL states. Similar chemical modification on bidentate and arene ligands or other sites of the pyridine ligand may lead to more efficient agents with PDT and/or PACT activities. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c5dt00939a
Biometal
Putta VR, Chintakuntla N, Mallepally RR +7 more · 2015 · Journal of Fluorescence · Springer · added 2026-05-01
The four novel Ru(II) complexes [Ru(phen)2MAFIP](2+) (1) [MAFIP = 2-(5-(methylacetate)furan-2-yl)-1 H-imidazo[4,5-f] [1, 10]phenanthroline, phen = 1,10-Phenanthroline], [Ru(bpy)2MAFIP](2+) (2) (bpy =  Show more
The four novel Ru(II) complexes [Ru(phen)2MAFIP](2+) (1) [MAFIP = 2-(5-(methylacetate)furan-2-yl)-1 H-imidazo[4,5-f] [1, 10]phenanthroline, phen = 1,10-Phenanthroline], [Ru(bpy)2MAFIP](2+) (2) (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) and [Ru(dmb)2MAFIP](2+) (3) (dmb = 4,4'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine) and [Ru(hdpa)2MAFIP](2+) (4) (hdpa = 2,2-dipyridylamine) have been synthesized and fully characterized via elemental analysis, NMR spectroscopy, EI-MS and FT-IR spectroscopy. In addition, the DNA-binding behaviors of the complexes 1-4 with calf thymus DNA were investigated by UV-Vis absorption, fluorescence studies and viscosity measurement. The DNA-binding experiments showed that the complexes 1-4 interact with CT-DNA through an intercalative mode. BSA protein binding affinity of synthesized complexes was determined by UV/Vis absorption and fluorescence emission titrations. The binding affinity of ruthenium complexes was supported by molecular docking. The photoactivated cleavage of plasmid pBR322 DNA by ruthenium complexes 1-4 was investigated. All the synthesized compounds were tested for antimicrobial activity by using three Gram-negative (Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) and three Gram-positive (Micrococcus luteus, Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium) organisms, these results indicated that complex 3 was more activity compared to other complexes against all tested microbial strains while moderate antimicrobial activity profile was noticed for complex 4. The antioxidant activity experiments show that the complexes exhibit moderate antioxidant activity. The cytotoxicity of synthesized complexes on HeLa cell lines has been examined by MTT assay. The apoptosis assay was carried out with Acridine Orange (AO) staining methods and the results indicate that complexes can induce the apoptosis of HeLa cells. The cell cycle arrest investigated by flow cytometry and these results indicate that complexes 1-4 induce the cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s10895-015-1705-z
Biometal
Støving Dam C, Alejo Perez Henarejos S, Tsolakou T +6 more · 2015 · Metallomics · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
In the present work a novel C,N-cyclometalated benzimidazole Ru(ii) arene complex (GY34) was characterized by applying an alternative, diverse approach considering both chemical and biological aspects Show more
In the present work a novel C,N-cyclometalated benzimidazole Ru(ii) arene complex (GY34) was characterized by applying an alternative, diverse approach considering both chemical and biological aspects. RP-HPLC-ICP-MS and RP-HPLC-ESI-MS analysis proved that GY34 in both RPMI-1640 cell medium and ammonium acetate buffer was transformed into several subspecies and the importance of evaluating and controlling analyte stability throughout experiments was demonstrated. Applying a novel cell fractionation protocol GY34 was found to target cell nuclei and mitochondria in Ehrlich Lettré Ascites (ELA) cells, with the intracellular distribution depending on GY34 concentration in the cell medium during incubation. In ELA cells 96 ± 0.2% of cytosolic GY34 was bound to high-molecular species. Furthermore, using the tracer technique GY34 was found to reduce uptake and increase release of the organic osmolyte taurine in ELA cells, with innate resistance to Cisplatin and in A2780 human ovarian cancer cells, with acquired resistance to Cisplatin. Importantly, FACS analysis revealed that GY34 induced apoptosis in ELA cells. The present data suggest the potential of GY34 in overcoming Cisplatin resistance. The methodology applied can be used as a general protocol and an additional tool in the initial evaluation of novel metal-based drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c5mt00056d
Biometal
Mario Kubanik, Jason K. Y. Tu, Tilo Söhnel +5 more · 2015 · Metallodrugs · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1515/medr-2015-0001
Biometal
Benabdelouahab Y, Muñoz-Moreno L, Frik M +6 more · 2015 · European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
The investigation of the hydrogen-bonding effect on the aggregation tendency of ruthenium compounds [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κNHR,κNOH)Cl]Cl (R = Ph (1a), Bn (1b)) and [(η Show more
The investigation of the hydrogen-bonding effect on the aggregation tendency of ruthenium compounds [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κNHR,κNOH)Cl]Cl (R = Ph (1a), Bn (1b)) and [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κ2NH(2-pic),κNOH)][PF6]2 (1c), [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κNHBn,κNO)Cl] (2b) and [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κNBn,κ2NO)] (3b), has been performed by means of concentration dependence 1H NMR chemical shifts and DOSY experiments. The synthesis and full characterization of new compounds 1c, [(η6-p-cymene)Ru(κNPh,κ2NO)] (3a) and 3b are also reported. The effect of the water soluble ruthenium complexes 1a-1c on cytotoxicity, cell adhesion and cell migration of the androgen-independent prostate cancer PC3 cells have been assessed by MTT, adhesion to type-I-collagen and recovery of monolayer wounds assays, respectively. Interactions of 1a-1c with DNA and human serum albumin have also been studied. Altogether, the properties reported herein suggest that ruthenium compounds 1a-1c have considerable potential as anticancer agents against advanced prostate cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ejic.201500097 📎 SI
Biometal
Huang H, Yu B, Zhang P +5 more · 2015 · Angewandte Chemie International Edition · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a noninvasive medical technique that has received increasing attention over the last years and been applied for the treatment of certain types of cancer. However, the cur Show more
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a noninvasive medical technique that has received increasing attention over the last years and been applied for the treatment of certain types of cancer. However, the currently clinically used PDT agents have several limitations, such as low water solubility, poor photostability, and limited selectivity towards cancer cells, aside from having very low two-photon cross-sections around 800 nm, which limits their potential use in TP-PDT. To tackle these drawbacks, three highly positively charged ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes were synthesized. These complexes selectively localize in the lysosomes, an ideal localization for PDT purposes. One of these complexes showed an impressive phototoxicity index upon irradiation at 800 nm in 3D HeLa multicellular tumor spheroids and thus holds great promise for applications in two-photon photodynamic therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/anie.201507800
Biometal
Yellol J, Pérez SA, Buceta A +8 more · 2015 · Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
A series of novel C,N-cyclometalated benzimidazole ruthenium(II) and iridium(III) complexes of the types [(η(6)-p-cymene)RuCl(κ(2)-N,C-L)] and [(η(5)-C5Me5)IrCl(κ(2)-N,C-L)] (HL = methyl 1-butyl-2-ary Show more
A series of novel C,N-cyclometalated benzimidazole ruthenium(II) and iridium(III) complexes of the types [(η(6)-p-cymene)RuCl(κ(2)-N,C-L)] and [(η(5)-C5Me5)IrCl(κ(2)-N,C-L)] (HL = methyl 1-butyl-2-arylbenzimidazolecarboxylate) with varying substituents (H, Me, F, CF3, MeO, NO2, and Ph) in the R4 position of the phenyl ring of 2-phenylbenzimidazole chelating ligand of the ruthenium (3a-g) and iridium complexes (4a-g) have been prepared. The cytotoxic activity of the new ruthenium(II) and iridium(III) compounds has been evaluated in a panel of cell lines (A2780, A2780cisR, A427, 5637, LCLC, SISO, and HT29) in order to investigate structure-activity relationships. Phenyl substitution at the R4 position shows increased potency in both Ru and Ir complexes (3g and 4g, respectively) as compared to their parent compounds (3a and 4a) in all cell lines. In general, ruthenium complexes are more active than the corresponding iridium complexes. The new ruthenium and iridium compounds increased caspase-3 activity in A2780 cells, as shown for 3a,d and 4a,d. Compound 4g is able to increase the production of ROS in A2780 cells. Furthermore, all the new compounds are able to overcome the cisplatin resistance in A2780cisR cells. In addition, some of the metal complexes effectively inhibit angiogenesis in the human umbilical vein endothelial cell line EA.hy926 at 0.5 μM, the ruthenium derivatives 3g (Ph) and 3d (CF3) being the best performers. QC calculations performed on some ruthenium model complexes showed only moderate or slight electron depletion at the phenyl ring of the C,N-cyclometalated ligand and the chlorine atom on increasing the electron withdrawing effect of the R substituent. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01194
Biometal
Côrte-Real L, Robalo MP, Marques F +7 more · 2015 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
A new family of eight ruthenium(II)-cyclopentadienyl bipyridine derivatives, bearing nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorous and carbonyl sigma bonded coligands, has been synthesized. Compounds bearing nitrogen Show more
A new family of eight ruthenium(II)-cyclopentadienyl bipyridine derivatives, bearing nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorous and carbonyl sigma bonded coligands, has been synthesized. Compounds bearing nitrogen bonded coligands were found to be unstable in aqueous solution, while the others presented appropriate stabilities for the biologic assays and pursued for determination of IC50 values in ovarian (A2780) and breast (MCF7 and MDAMB231) human cancer cell lines. These studies were also carried out for the [5: HSA] and [6: HSA] adducts (HSA=human serum albumin) and a better performance was found for the first case. Spectroscopic, electrochemical studies by cyclic voltammetry and density functional theory calculations allowed us to get some understanding on the electronic flow directions within the molecules and to find a possible clue concerning the structural features of coligands that can activate bipyridyl ligands toward an increased cytotoxic effect. X-ray structure analysis of compound [Ru(η(5)-C5H5)(bipy)(PPh3)][PF6] (7; bipy=bipyridine) showed crystallization on C2/c space group with two enantiomers of the [Ru(η(5)-C5H5)(bipy)(PPh3)](+) cation complex in the racemic crystal packing. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2015.06.015
Biometal
Kaluđerović GN, Krajnović T, Momcilovic M +4 more · 2015 · Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
[Ru(η(6)-p-cym)Cl{dpa(CH2)4COOEt}][PF6] (cym=cymene; dpa=2,2'-dipyridylamine; complex 2) was prepared and characterized by elemental analysis, IR and multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, as well as ESI-MS a Show more
[Ru(η(6)-p-cym)Cl{dpa(CH2)4COOEt}][PF6] (cym=cymene; dpa=2,2'-dipyridylamine; complex 2) was prepared and characterized by elemental analysis, IR and multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, as well as ESI-MS and X-ray structural analysis. The structural analog without a side chain [Ru(η(6)-p-cym)Cl(dpa)][PF6] (1) as well as 2 were investigated in vitro against 518A2, SW480, 8505C, A253 and MCF-7 cell lines. Complex 1 is active against all investigated tumor cell lines while the activity of compound 2 is limited only to caspase 3 deficient MCF-7 breast cancer cells, however, both are less active than cisplatin. As CD4(+)Th cells are necessary to trigger all the immune effector mechanisms required to eliminate tumor cells, besides testing the in vitro antitumor activity of 1 and 2, the effect of ruthenium(II) complexes on the cells of the adaptive immune system have also been evaluated. Importantly, complex 1 applied in concentrations which were effective against tumor cells did not affect immune cell viability, nor did exert a general immunosuppressive effect on cytokine production. Thus, beneficial characteristics of 1 might contribute to the overall therapeutic properties of the complex. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2015.09.006
Biometal
Purkait K, Karmakar S, Bhattacharyya S +3 more · 2015 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
A slow hydrolyzing imidazole-based Ru(II)-arene complex [(L)Ru(II)(η(6)-p-cym)(Cl)](PF6) (1) with excellent stability in the extracellular chloride concentration shows better activity under hypoxia an Show more
A slow hydrolyzing imidazole-based Ru(II)-arene complex [(L)Ru(II)(η(6)-p-cym)(Cl)](PF6) (1) with excellent stability in the extracellular chloride concentration shows better activity under hypoxia and strong resistance to glutathione (GSH) in vitro under hypoxic conditions. 1 arrests the cell cycle in sub G1 and G2/M phases and leads to apoptosis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c4dt03983a
Biometal apoptosis
Venkat Reddy P, Reddy MR, Avudoddi S +6 more · 2015 · Analytical Biochemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
A novel polypyridyl ligand CNPFIP (CNPFIP=2-(5(4-chloro-2-nitrophenyl)furan-2-yl)-1H-imidazo[4,5f][1,10]phenanthroline) and its mononuclear Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes of [Ru(phen)2CNPFIP](2+)(1) (ph Show more
A novel polypyridyl ligand CNPFIP (CNPFIP=2-(5(4-chloro-2-nitrophenyl)furan-2-yl)-1H-imidazo[4,5f][1,10]phenanthroline) and its mononuclear Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes of [Ru(phen)2CNPFIP](2+)(1) (phen=1,10-phenanthroline), [Ru(bpy)2CNPFIP](2+)(2) (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine), and [Ru(dmb)2CNPFIP](2+)(3) (dmb=4,4'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine) have been synthesized successfully and characterized thoroughly by elemental analysis, UV/Vis, IR, NMR, and ESI-MS. The interaction of the Ru(II) complexes with calf thymus DNA (CT-DNA) was investigated by absorption titration, fluorescence, viscosity measurements. The experimental results suggest that three complexes bind to CT-DNA through an intercalative mode and the DNA-binding affinity of complex 1 is greater than that of complexes 2 and 3. The photocleavage of plasmid pBR322 DNA by ruthenium complexes 1, 2, and 3 was investigated. We have also tested three complexes for their antimicrobial activity against Escherichia coli (Gram-negative) and Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive) bacteria. The in vitro cytotoxicity of these complexes was evaluated by MTT assay, and complex 1 shows higher cytotoxicity than 2 and 3 on HeLa cells. The induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest of HeLa cells were investigated by flow cytometry for 24h. The molecular docking of ruthenium complexes 1, 2, and 3 with the active site pocket residues of human DNA TOP1 was performed using LibDock. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2015.06.015
Biometal
Jayanthi Eswaran, Kalaiselvi Sivalingam, Vijaya Padma Viswanatha +2 more · 2015 · Inorganica Chimica Acta · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2015.01.045
Biometal
Wei Su, Zhaofeng Tang, Qi Xiao +7 more · 2015 · Journal of Organometallic Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jorganchem.2014.12.041
Biometal
Cao W, Zheng W, Chen T. · 2015 · Scientific Reports · Nature · added 2026-05-01
Ruthenium-based complexes have emerged as promising antitumor and antimetastatic agents during the past decades. However, the limited understanding of the antimetastatic mechanisms of these agents is Show more
Ruthenium-based complexes have emerged as promising antitumor and antimetastatic agents during the past decades. However, the limited understanding of the antimetastatic mechanisms of these agents is a roadblock to their clinical application. Herein, we reported that, RuPOP, a ruthenium polypyridyl complex with potent antitumor activity, was able to effectively inhibit growth and metastasis of MDA-MB-231 cells and synergistically enhance TRAIL-induced apoptosis. The selective intracellular uptake and cytotoxic effect of RuPOP was found associated with transferring receptor (TfR)-mediated endocytosis. Further investigation on intracellular mechanisms reveled that RuPOP notably suppressed FAK-mediated ERK and Akt activation. Pretreatment of cells with ERK inhibitor (U0126) and PI3K inhibitor (LY294002) significantly potentiated the inhibitory effect of RuPOP on cell growth, migration and invasion. Moreover, the alternation in the expression levels of metastatic regulatory proteins, including uPA, MMP-2/-9, and inhibition of VEGF secretion were also observed after RuPOP treatment. These results demonstrate the inhibitory effect of RuPOP on the growth and metastasis of cancer cells and the enhancement of TRAIL-induced apoptosis though suppression of FAK-mediated signaling. Furthermore, RuPOP exhibits the potential to be developed as a metal-based antimetastatic agent and chemosensitizer of TRAIL for the treatment of human metastatic cancers. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/srep09157 📎 SI
Biometal
Deng Z, Yu L, Cao W +2 more · 2015 · Chemical Communications · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
A novel selenium-containing ruthenium complex Ru(phtpy)(phenSe)Cl(ClO4) (phtpy = 4-phenyl-2,2':6',2''-terpyridine, phenSe = 2-selenicimidazole[4,5-f]1,10-phenanthroline) has been synthesized and found Show more
A novel selenium-containing ruthenium complex Ru(phtpy)(phenSe)Cl(ClO4) (phtpy = 4-phenyl-2,2':6',2''-terpyridine, phenSe = 2-selenicimidazole[4,5-f]1,10-phenanthroline) has been synthesized and found be able to enhance radiation-induced DNA damage through superoxide overproduction, which leads to G2/M arrest and apoptosis in cancer cells by activating ROS-mediated pathways. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c4cc07926d
Biometal
Karaoun N, Renfrew AK. · 2015 · Chemical Communications · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
We report a novel ruthenium(II) complex for selective release of the imidazole-based drug econazole. While the complex is highly stable and luminescent in the dark, irradiation with green light induce Show more
We report a novel ruthenium(II) complex for selective release of the imidazole-based drug econazole. While the complex is highly stable and luminescent in the dark, irradiation with green light induces release of one of the econazole ligands, which is accompanied by a turn-off luminescence response and up to a 34-fold increase in cytotoxicity towards tumour cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c5cc05172j
Biometal
Oehninger L, Spreckelmeyer S, Holenya P +7 more · 2015 · Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Organometallics with N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands have triggered major interest in inorganic medicinal chemistry. Complexes of the type Rh(I)(NHC)(COD)X (where X is Cl or I, COD is cyclooctadi Show more
Organometallics with N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands have triggered major interest in inorganic medicinal chemistry. Complexes of the type Rh(I)(NHC)(COD)X (where X is Cl or I, COD is cyclooctadiene, and NHC is a dimethylbenzimidazolylidene) represent a promising type of new metallodrugs that have been explored by advanced biomedical methods only recently. In this work, we have synthesized and characterized several complexes of this type. As observed by mass spectrometry, these complexes remained stable over at least 3 h in aqueous solution, after which hydrolysis of the halido ligands occurred and release of the NHC ligand was evident. Effects against mitochondria and general cell tumor metabolism were noted at higher concentrations, whereas phosphorylation of HSP27, p38, ERK1/2, FAK, and p70S6K was induced substantially already at lower exposure levels. Regarding the antiproliferative activity in tumor cells, a clear preference for iodido over chlorido secondary ligands was noted, as well as effects of the substituents of the NHC ligand. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01159
Biometal
Éva A. Enyedy, Orsolya Dömötör, Carmen M. Hackl +5 more · 2015 · Journal of Coordination Chemistry · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1080/00958972.2015.1023195
Biometal
Păunescu E, Nowak-Sliwinska P, Clavel CM +3 more · 2015 · ChemMedChem · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
Osmium compounds are attracting increasing attention as potential anticancer drugs. In this context, a series of bifunctional organometallic osmium(II)-p-cymene complexes functionalized with alkyl or Show more
Osmium compounds are attracting increasing attention as potential anticancer drugs. In this context, a series of bifunctional organometallic osmium(II)-p-cymene complexes functionalized with alkyl or perfluoroalkyl groups were prepared and screened for their antiproliferative activity. Three compounds from the series display selectivity toward cancer cells, with moderate cytotoxicity observed against human ovarian carcinoma (A2780) cells, whereas no cytotoxicity was observed on non-cancerous human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cells and human endothelial (ECRF24) cells. Two of these three cancer-cell-selective compounds induce cell death largely via apoptosis and were also found to disrupt vascularization in the chicken embryo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) model. Based on these promising properties, these compounds have potential clinical applications. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201500221
Biometal apoptosis
Hearn JM, Romero-Canelón I, Munro AF +6 more · 2015 · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · National Academy of Sciences · added 2026-05-01
The organometallic "half-sandwich" compound [Os(η(6)-p-cymene)(4-(2-pyridylazo)-N,N-dimethylaniline)I]PF6 is 49× more potent than the clinical drug cisplatin in the 809 cancer cell lines that we scree Show more
The organometallic "half-sandwich" compound [Os(η(6)-p-cymene)(4-(2-pyridylazo)-N,N-dimethylaniline)I]PF6 is 49× more potent than the clinical drug cisplatin in the 809 cancer cell lines that we screened and is a candidate drug for cancer therapy. We investigate the mechanism of action of compound 1 in A2780 epithelial ovarian cancer cells. Whole-transcriptome sequencing identified three missense mutations in the mitochondrial genome of this cell line, coding for ND5, a subunit of complex I (NADH dehydrogenase) in the electron transport chain. ND5 is a proton pump, helping to maintain the coupling gradient in mitochondria. The identified mutations correspond to known protein variants (p.I257V, p.N447S, and p.L517P), not reported previously in epithelial ovarian cancer. Time-series RNA sequencing suggested that osmium-exposed A2780 cells undergo a metabolic shunt from glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation, where defective machinery, associated with mutations in complex I, could enhance activity. Downstream events, measured by time-series reverse-phase protein microarrays, high-content imaging, and flow cytometry, showed a dramatic increase in mitochondrially produced reactive oxygen species (ROS) and subsequent DNA damage with up-regulation of ATM, p53, and p21 proteins. In contrast to platinum drugs, exposure to this organo-osmium compound does not cause significant apoptosis within a 72-h period, highlighting a different mechanism of action. Superoxide production in ovarian, lung, colon, breast, and prostate cancer cells exposed to three other structurally related organo-Os(II) compounds correlated with their antiproliferative activity. DNA damage caused indirectly, through selective ROS generation, may provide a more targeted approach to cancer therapy and a concept for next-generation metal-based anticancer drugs that combat platinum resistance. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1500925112 📎 SI
Biometal
Klajner M, Licona C, Fetzer L +5 more · 2014 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Ruthenium-based compounds are developed for anticancer treatment, but their mode of action including their import mechanism and subcellular localization remains elusive. Here, we used the intrinsic lu Show more
Ruthenium-based compounds are developed for anticancer treatment, but their mode of action including their import mechanism and subcellular localization remains elusive. Here, we used the intrinsic luminescent properties of cytotoxic organoruthenium (Ru(II)) compounds obtained with an anionic cyclometalated 2-phenylpyridine chelate and neutral aromatic chelating ligands (e.g., phenanthrolines) to follow their behavior in living cells. We established that the difference in sensitivity between cancer cells and noncancerous cells toward one of the compounds correlates with its import kinetics and follows a balance between active and passive transport. The active-transport mechanism involves iron and amino-acid transporters, which are transcriptionally regulated by the drug. We also demonstrated a correlation between the accumulation of these compounds in specific compartments (endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus, mitochondria) and the activation of specific cytotoxic mechanisms such as the mitochondrial stress pathway. Our study pinpoints a novel and complex mechanism of accumulation of ruthenium drugs in cancer cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/ic500250e
Biometal
Alagesan M, Bhuvanesh NS, Dharmaraj N. · 2014 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
A new set of ruthenium(II) hydrazone complexes [Ru(H)(CO)(PPh3)2(L)] (1) and [RuCl2(DMSO)2(HL)] (2), with triphenyl phosphine or DMSO as co-ligands was synthesized by reacting benzoyl pyridine furoic Show more
A new set of ruthenium(II) hydrazone complexes [Ru(H)(CO)(PPh3)2(L)] (1) and [RuCl2(DMSO)2(HL)] (2), with triphenyl phosphine or DMSO as co-ligands was synthesized by reacting benzoyl pyridine furoic acid hydrazone (HL) with [Ru(H)(Cl)(CO)(PPh3)3] and [RuCl2(DMSO)4]. The single crystal X-ray data of complexes 1 and 2 revealed an octahedral geometry around the ruthenium ion in which the hydrazone is coordinated through ON and NN atoms in complexes 1 and 2 respectively. The interaction of the compounds with calf thymus DNA (CT-DNA) has been estimated by absorption and emission titration methods which indicated that the ligand and the complexes interacted with CT-DNA through intercalation. In addition, the DNA cleavage ability of these newly synthesized ruthenium complexes assessed by an agarose gel electrophoresis method demonstrated that complex 2 has a higher DNA cleavage activity than that of complex 1. The binding properties of the free ligand and its complexes with bovine serum albumin (BSA) protein have been investigated using UV-visible, fluorescence and synchronous fluorescence spectroscopic methods which indicated the stronger binding nature of the ruthenium complexes to BSA than the free hydrazone ligand. Furthermore, the cytotoxicity of the compounds examined in vitro on a human cervical cancer cell line (HeLa) and a normal mouse embryonic fibroblasts cell line (NIH 3T3) revealed that complex 2 exhibited a superior cytotoxicity than complex 1 to the cancer cells but was less toxic to the normal mouse embryonic fibroblasts under identical conditions. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c3dt51949j
Biometal
Bianca M. Blunden, Aditya Rawal, Hongxu Lu +1 more · 2014 · Macromolecules · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/ma402078d
Biometal
Liu Z, Romero-Canelón I, Habtemariam A +2 more · 2014 · Organometallics · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
We report the synthesis and characterization of eight half-sandwich cyclopentadienyl IrIII pyridine complexes of the type [(η5-Cpxph)Ir(phpy)Z]PF6, in which Show more
We report the synthesis and characterization of eight half-sandwich cyclopentadienyl IrIII pyridine complexes of the type [(η5-Cpxph)Ir(phpy)Z]PF6, in which Cpxph = C5Me4C6H5 (tetramethyl(phenyl)cyclopentadienyl), phpy = 2-phenylpyridine as CN-chelating ligand, and Z = pyridine (py) or a pyridine derivative. Three X-ray crystal structures have been determined. The monodentate py ligands blocked hydrolysis; however, antiproliferative studies showed that all the Ir compounds are highly active toward A2780, A549, and MCF-7 human cancer cells. In general the introduction of an electron-donating group (e.g., Me, NMe2) at specific positions on the pyridine ring resulted in increased antiproliferative activity, whereas electron-withdrawing groups (e.g., COMe, COOMe, CONEt2) decreased anticancer activity. Complex 5 displayed the highest anticancer activity, exhibiting submicromolar potency toward a range of cancer cell lines in the National Cancer Institute NCI-60 screen, ca. 5 times more potent than the clinical platinum(II) drug cisplatin. DNA binding appears not to be the major mechanism of action. Although complexes [(η5-Cpxph)Ir(phpy)(py)]+ (1) and [(η5-Cpxph)Ir(phpy)(4-NMe2-py)]+ (5) did not cause cell apoptosis or cell cycle arrest after 24 h drug exposure in A2780 human ovarian cancer cells at IC50 concentrations, they increased the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) dramatically and led to a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), which appears to contribute to the anticancer activity. This class of organometallic Ir complexes has unusual features worthy of further exploration in the design of novel anticancer drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/om500644f 📎 SI
Biometal
Vilanova-Costa CA, Porto HK, Pereira Fde C +3 more · 2014 · BioMetals · Springer · added 2026-05-01
Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in the world, and non-small cell lung carcinoma accounts for approximately 75-85 % of all lung cancers. In the present work, we studied the antitumor Show more
Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in the world, and non-small cell lung carcinoma accounts for approximately 75-85 % of all lung cancers. In the present work, we studied the antitumor activity of the compound cis-(dichloro)tetramineruthenium(III) chloride {cis-[RuCl2(NH3)4]Cl} against human lung carcinoma tumor cell line A549. The present study aimed to investigate the relationship between the expression of MDR1 and CYP450 genes in human lung carcinoma cell lines A549 treated with cisCarboPt, cisCRu(III) and cisDRu(III). The ruthenium-based coordinated complexes presented low cytotoxic and antiproliferative activities, with high IC50 values, 196 (±15.49), 472 (±20.29) and 175 (±1.41) for cisCarboPt, cisCRu(III) and cisDRu(III), respectively. The tested compounds induced apoptosis in A549 tumor cells as evidenced by caspase 3 activation, but only at high concentrations. Results also revealed that the amplification of P-gp gene is greater in A549 cells exposed to cisCarboPt and cisCRu(III) than cisDRu(III). Taken together all these results strongly demonstrate that MDR-1 over-expression in A549 cells could be associated to a MDR phenotype of these cells and moreover, it is also contributing to the platinum, and structurally-related compound, resistance in these cells. The identification and characterization of novel mechanisms of drug resistance will enable the development of a new generation of anti-cancer drugs that increase cancer sensitivity and/or represent more effective chemotherapeutic agents. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s10534-014-9715-x
Biometal
Leonidova A, Pierroz V, Rubbiani R +3 more · 2014 · Dalton Trans. · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
Over the recent years, several Re(I) organometallic compounds have been shown to be toxic to various cancer cell lines. However, these compounds lacked sufficient selectivity towards cancer tissues to Show more
Over the recent years, several Re(I) organometallic compounds have been shown to be toxic to various cancer cell lines. However, these compounds lacked sufficient selectivity towards cancer tissues to be used as novel chemotherapeutic agents. In this study, we probe the potential of two known N,N-bis(quinolinoyl) Re(I) tricarbonyl complex derivatives, namely Re(I) tricarbonyl [N,N-bis(quinolin-2-ylmethyl)amino]-4-butane-1-amine (Re-NH₂) and Re(I) tricarbonyl [N,N-bis(quinolin-2-ylmethyl)amino]-5-valeric acid (Re-COOH), as photodynamic therapy (PDT) photosensitizers. Re-NH₂ and Re-COOH proved to be excellent singlet oxygen generators in a lipophilic environment with quantum yields of about 75%. Furthermore, we envisaged to improve the selectivity of Re-COOH via conjugation to two types of peptides, namely a nuclear localization signal (NLS) and a derivative of the neuropeptide bombesin, to form Re-NLS and Re-Bombesin, respectively. Fluorescent microscopy on cervical cancer cells (HeLa) showed that the conjugation of Re-COOH to NLS significantly enhanced the compound's accumulation into the cell nucleus and more specifically into its nucleoli. Importantly, in view of PDT applications, the cytotoxicity of the Re complexes and their bioconjugates increased significantly upon light irradiation. In particular, Re-Bombesin was found to be at least 20-fold more toxic after light irradiation. DNA photo-cleavage studies demonstrated that all compounds damaged DNA via singlet oxygen and, to a minor extent, superoxide production. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c3dt51817e
Biometal
Han BJ, Jiang GB, Yao JH +4 more · 2014 · Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
Two new ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes [Ru(dmb)2(dcdppz)](ClO4)2 (1) and [Ru(bpy)2(dcdppz)](ClO4)2 (2) were prepared and characterized. The crystal structure of the complex 2 was solved by single Show more
Two new ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes [Ru(dmb)2(dcdppz)](ClO4)2 (1) and [Ru(bpy)2(dcdppz)](ClO4)2 (2) were prepared and characterized. The crystal structure of the complex 2 was solved by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The complex crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group P21/n with a=12.9622(14)Å, b=17.1619(19)Å, c=22.7210(3)Å, β=100.930(2)(°), R=0.0536, Rω=0.1111. The DNA-binding constants for complexes 1 and 2 were determined to be 1.92×10(5) (s=1.72) and 2.24×10(5) (s=1.86)M(-1), respectively. The DNA-binding behaviors showed that complexes 1 and 2 interact with DNA by intercalative mode. The antioxidant activities of the ligand and the complexes were performed. Ligand, dcdppz, has no cytotoxicity against the selected cell lines. Complex 1 shows higher cytotoxicity than complex 2, but lower than cisplatin toward selected cell lines. The apoptosis and cell cycle arrest were investigated, and the apoptotic mechanism of BEL-7402 cells was studied by reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial membrane potential and western blot analysis. Complex 1 induces apoptosis in BEL-7402 cells through ROS-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction pathway and by regulating the expression of Bcl-2 family proteins. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.saa.2014.07.075
Biometal
Du Y, Fu X, Li H +8 more · 2014 · ChemMedChem · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
A series of ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes were synthesized and evaluated for their in vitro anticancer activities. The results showed that ruthenium polypyridyl complexes, especially [Ru(bpy)2 ( Show more
A series of ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes were synthesized and evaluated for their in vitro anticancer activities. The results showed that ruthenium polypyridyl complexes, especially [Ru(bpy)2 (p-tFPIP)](2+) (2 a; bpy=bipyridine, tFPIP=2-(2-trifluoromethane phenyl)imidazole[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline), exhibited novel anticancer activity against human cancer cell lines, but with less toxicity to a human normal cell line. The results of flow cytometry and caspase activities analysis indicated that the 2 a-induced growth inhibition against MG-63 osteosarcoma cells was mainly caused by mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. DNA fragmentation and nuclear condensation as detected by TUNEL-DAPI co-staining further confirmed 2 a-induced apoptotic cell death. Further, fluorescence imaging revealed that ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes could target mitochondria to induce mitochondrial fragmentation, accompanied by depletion of mitochondrial membrane potential. Taken together, these findings suggest a potential application of theses ruthenium(II) complexes in the treatment of cancers. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201300379
Biometal
Garza-Ortiz A, Maheswari PU, Lutz M +2 more · 2014 · JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry · Springer · added 2026-05-01
Synthesis, spectroscopy, characterization, structures, and cytotoxicity studies of 2,6-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyliminomethyl)pyridine (LLL) ruthenium compounds are described. The starting compound [RuC Show more
Synthesis, spectroscopy, characterization, structures, and cytotoxicity studies of 2,6-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyliminomethyl)pyridine (LLL) ruthenium compounds are described. The starting compound [RuCl3(LLL)] has been fully characterized using IR spectroscopy, UV-vis spectroscopy, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, and NMR spectroscopy. In addition, the crystal structure of the ligand LLL has been determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. With the ruthenium(III) trichloride compound as starting material, a new family of Ru(II) complexes with a number of neutral and charged bidentate co-ligands have been synthesized and used for characterization and cytotoxicity studies. The synthesis of the corresponding [Ru(II)LLL(LL)Cl](+/0) complexes with co-ligands- LL is 1,10-phenanthroline, 2,2'-bipyridyl, 2-(phenylazo)pyridine, 2-(phenylazo)-3-methylpyridine, 2-(tolylazo)pyridine, or the anionic 2-picolinate-is reported. Analytical, spectroscopic (IR spectroscopy, UV-vis spectroscopy, (1)H NMR spectroscopy, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry), and structural characterization of the new compounds is described. Crystal structure analyses of two Ru(II) compounds show a slightly distorted octahedral Ru(II) geometry with tridentate LLL coordinated in a planar meridional fashion, and the chelating co-ligand (LL) and a chloride ion complete the octahedron. The co-ligand plays a significant role in modulating the physicochemical and cytotoxic properties of these new ruthenium complexes. The in vitro cytotoxicity of these new Ru(II) complexes (half-maximal inhibitory concentration, IC50, of 0.5-1.5 μM), in comparison with the parent Ru(III) compound (half-maximal inhibitory concentration of 3.9-4.3 μM) is higher for several of the human cancer cell lines tested. The cytotoxic activity of some of the new ruthenium compounds is even higher than that of cisplatin in the same cancer cell lines. The cytotoxicity of these new anticancer compounds is discussed in the light of structure-based activity relationships, and a possible mechanism of action is suggested. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00775-013-1083-4
Biometal
Sun J, Huang Y, Zheng C +3 more · 2014 · Biological Trace Element Research · Springer · added 2026-05-01
The interaction of ruthenium (II) complex [Ru(bpy)2(mal)](2+) (RBM) and [Ru(phen)2(mal)](2+) (RPM) (bpy = 2, 2-bipyridine, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, mal = malonyl carboxylate) with human serum album Show more
The interaction of ruthenium (II) complex [Ru(bpy)2(mal)](2+) (RBM) and [Ru(phen)2(mal)](2+) (RPM) (bpy = 2, 2-bipyridine, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, mal = malonyl carboxylate) with human serum albumin (HSA) has been investigated by using fluorescence, UV absorption and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy approaches. A strong fluorescence quenching reaction of complexes to HSA was observed and the quenching mechanism was suggested as static quenching according to the Stern-Volmer (S-V) equation. The number of binding sites n and observed binding constant Kb was measured by fluorescence quenching method. The thermodynamic parameters ΔH, ΔS, and ΔG at different temperatures were calculated and the results indicate the binding reaction is mainly entropy-driven and Vander Waals force played a major role in the reaction. The result of CD showed that the secondary structure of HSA molecules was changed in the presence of the ruthenium (II) complexes. Furthermore, the cell viability of ruthenium (II) complexes was evaluated by MTT and complex RPM has shown significant higher anticancer potency than RBM against all the cell lines screened. RPM showed a significant antitumor activity through induction of apoptosis in A549 cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12011-014-0165-7
Biometal