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🏷️ Tags (8587 usages)
⚗️ 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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117 articles with selected tags
Zabala-Letona, Amaia, Pujana-Vaquerizo, Mikel, Martinez-Laosa, Belen +49 more · 2026 · Nature Publishing Group · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Polyamines prevent the action of kinases on acidic phosphorylatable motifs in spliceosomal proteins, thus providing a mechanism for metabolite-mediated regulation of alternative splicing in cells.
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09965-1
alternative splicing bioinorganic kinase inhibition metabolite-mediated regulation polyamines protein spliceosomal proteins
Picard, Martin, Kempes, Christopher P. · 2026 · Nature 2026 651:8105 · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Including energy dynamics in research could improve our understanding of diseases and of the healing processes that sustain health. Including energy dynamics in research could improve our understandin Show more
Including energy dynamics in research could improve our understanding of diseases and of the healing processes that sustain health. Including energy dynamics in research could improve our understanding of diseases and of the healing processes that sustain health. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/d41586-026-00701-x
alzheimer bioinorganic cancer
Neetu Singh, Haneul Im, Seongyeon Kwon +2 more · 2025 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Flavins─one of nature's most ubiquitous organic cofactors─mediate proton and electron transfers in biological systems. Their heterocyclic (iso)alloxazine cores enable such reactivity through pronounce Show more
Flavins─one of nature's most ubiquitous organic cofactors─mediate proton and electron transfers in biological systems. Their heterocyclic (iso)alloxazine cores enable such reactivity through pronounced electro- and photochemical properties, as well as hydrogen bonding with surrounding residues. To harness these features in an organometallic context, we developed a redox-active, flavin-derived bidentate ligand (allLH) that engages both primary and secondary coordination spheres. Coordination with Fe(II) yields an octahedral complex, (allLH)2FeX2 (X = Cl, Br, OTf), stabilized by outer-sphere hydrogen bonds between the ligand and metal-bound (pseudo)halides. Upon deprotonation, allLH undergoes tautomerization to the isoalloxazine form (isoL), generating a hydrogen-bonded aqua complex, (isoL)2Fe(OH2)2. Furthermore, treatment of (allLH)2FeCl2 with cobaltocene triggers ligand tautomerization, affording [(allLH)(isoL)FeCl2][CoCp2] and highlighting the redox-responsive nature of the flavin scaffold. This work introduces a novel approach to repurpose flavin as a multifunctional ligand platform for constructing tunable coordination environments around transition metal centers, offering new opportunities in ligand design and bioinspired reactivity. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.5c03941
bioinorganic catalysis cobaltocene coordination chemistry fe flavin isoalloxazine x-ray crystallography
2025 · Cell Death & Disease · Nature · added 2026-04-21
Abstract Ferroptosis, a novel form of regulated cell death induced by the excessive accumulation of lipid peroxidation products, plays a pivotal role in the suppression of tumorigenesis. Two Show more
Abstract Ferroptosis, a novel form of regulated cell death induced by the excessive accumulation of lipid peroxidation products, plays a pivotal role in the suppression of tumorigenesis. Two prominent mitochondrial ferroptosis defense systems are glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH), both of which are localized within the mitochondria. However, the existence of supplementary cellular defense mechanisms against mitochondrial ferroptosis remains unclear. Our findings unequivocally demonstrate that inactivation of mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I (MCI) induces lipid peroxidation and consequently invokes ferroptosis across GPX4 low-expression cancer cells. However, in GPX4 high expression cancer cells, the MCI inhibitor did not induce ferroptosis, but increased cell sensitivity to ferroptosis induced by the GPX4 inhibitor. Overexpression of the MCI alternative protein yeast NADH-ubiquinone reductase (NDI1) not only quells ferroptosis induced by MCI inhibitors but also confers cellular protection against ferroptosis inducers. Mechanically, MCI inhibitors actuate an elevation in the NADH level while concomitantly diminishing the CoQH2 level. The manifestation of MCI inhibitor-induced ferroptosis can be reversed by supplementation with mitochondrial-specific analogues of CoQH2. Notably, MCI operates in parallel with mitochondrial-localized GPX4 and DHODH to inhibit mitochondrial ferroptosis, but independently of cytosolically localized GPX4 or ferroptosis suppressor protein 1(FSP1). The MCI inhibitor IACS-010759, is endowed with the ability to induce ferroptosis while concurrently impeding tumor proliferation in vivo. Our results identified a ferroptosis defense mechanism mediated by MCI within the mitochondria and suggested a therapeutic strategy for targeting ferroptosis in cancer treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41419-025-07510-6
anticancer bioinorganic cancer complex i dhodh flow cytometry gpx4 iacs-010759
2025 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer (HGSOC) is the most common and lethal subtype of ovarian cancer, known for its high aggressiveness and extensive genomic alterations. Typically diagnosed at an advance Show more
High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer (HGSOC) is the most common and lethal subtype of ovarian cancer, known for its high aggressiveness and extensive genomic alterations. Typically diagnosed at an advanced stage, HGSOC presents formidable challenges in drug therapy. The limited efficacy of standard treatments, development of chemoresistance, scarcity of targeted therapies, and significant tumor heterogeneity render this disease incurable with current treatment options, highlighting the urgent need for novel therapeutic approaches to improve patient outcomes. In this study we report a straightforward and stereoselective synthetic route to novel Pd(II)-vinyl and -butadienyl complexes bearing a wide range of monodentate and bidentate ligands. Most of the synthesized complexes exhibited good to excellent in vitro anticancer activity against ovarian cancer cells. Particularly promising is the water-soluble complex bearing two PTA (1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane) ligands and the Pd(II)-butadienyl fragment. This compound combines excellent cytotoxicity towards cancer cells with substantial inactivity towards non-cancerous ones. This derivative was selected for further studies on ex vivo tumor organoids and in vivo mouse models, which demonstrate its remarkable efficacy with surprisingly low collateral toxicity even at high dosages. Moreover, this class of compounds appears to operate through a ferroptotic mechanism, thus representing the first such example for an organopalladium compound. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d5dt00194c
anticancer bidentate bioinorganic cancer cancer cells cytotoxicity ex vivo in vitro
Ashish Kumar Yadav, Rajesh Kushwaha, Arif Ali Mandal +2 more · 2025 · Journal of the American Chemical Society · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Photocatalytic cancer therapy (PCT) has emerged as a cutting-edge anticancer mechanism of action, harnessing light energy to mediate the catalytic oxidation of intracellular substrates. PCT is of sign Show more
Photocatalytic cancer therapy (PCT) has emerged as a cutting-edge anticancer mechanism of action, harnessing light energy to mediate the catalytic oxidation of intracellular substrates. PCT is of significant current importance due to its potential to address the limitations of conventional chemotherapy, particularly drug resistance and side effects. This approach offers a noninvasive, targeted cancer treatment option by utilizing metal-based photocatalysts to induce redox and metabolic disorders within cancer cells. The photocatalysts disrupt the cancer cell metabolism by converting NADH/NAD(P)H to NAD+/NAD(P)+ via catalytic photoredox processes, altering intracellular NAD+/NADH or NAD(P)+/NAD(P)H ratios, which are crucial for cellular metabolism. Ir(III), Ru(II), Re(I), and Os(II) photocatalysts demonstrated promising PCT efficacy. Despite these developments, gaps remain in the literature for translating this new anticancer mechanism into clinical trials. This Perspective critically examines the developments in this research area and provides future directions for designing efficient photocatalysts for PCT. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jacs.4c18328
anticancer bioinorganic cancer catalysis cell metabolism disruption dft intracellular substrates ir
2025 · RSC Chemical Biology · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
Water is arguably one of the most important chemicals essential for the functioning of biological molecules. In the context of DNA, it plays a crucial role in stabilizing and modulating its structure Show more
Water is arguably one of the most important chemicals essential for the functioning of biological molecules. In the context of DNA, it plays a crucial role in stabilizing and modulating its structure and function. The discovery of water-bound motifs in crystal structures has greatly improved our understanding of the interactions between structured water molecules and DNA. In this manuscript, we review the role of water in mediating biologically relevant DNA structures, in particular those arising from epigenetic modifications and higher-order structures such as G-quadruplexes and i-motifs. We also examine water-mediated interactions between DNA and various small molecules, including groove binders and intercalators, and emphasize their importance for DNA function and therapeutic development. Finally, we discuss recent advances in tools and techniques for predicting water interactions in nucleic acid structures. By offering a fresh perspective on the role of water, this review underscores its importance as a molecular modulator of DNA structure and function. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d4cb00308j
bioinorganic dft dna dna binding drug delivery interactions medicinal chemistry supramolecular
Liyan Jia, Yan Qiao · 2025 · Journal of the American Chemical Society · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
In nature, life is inherently dissipative. Cells continuously consume energy (such as ATP) to sustain homeostasis, drive metabolism, and respond dynamically to environmental cues. Inspired by this pri Show more
In nature, life is inherently dissipative. Cells continuously consume energy (such as ATP) to sustain homeostasis, drive metabolism, and respond dynamically to environmental cues. Inspired by this principle, we develop a synthetic protocell system that exhibits dissipative behavior and initiates metabolic-like processes. Our design features synthetic vesicles formed from a cationic surfactant, which undergo a fuel-driven transformation into coacervate protocells via liquid-liquid phase separation. Dissipation is achieved through alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis, driving the reverse transition from coacervates back to vesicles. The distinct physicochemical properties and internal organization of vesicle and coacervate protocells enable us to design functional regulators capable of producing secondary signals, such as fluorescence and enzymatic products. This work offers a strategy for engineering enzymatic reaction-regulated dissipative behaviors of protocell systems that emulate key aspects of cellular metabolism, representing a step toward synthetic life-like systems with dynamic behavior and functional complexity. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c13569 📎 SI
alkaline phosphatase atp atp hydrolysis bioinorganic cationic surfactant coordination chemistry dissipative behavior enzymatic reaction
Tanmoy Paul, Chunli Yan, Jina Yu +4 more · 2025 · Nature communications · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Transcription-coupled repair (TCR) is a vital nucleotide excision repair sub-pathway that removes DNA lesions from actively transcribed DNA strands. Binding of CSB to lesion-stalled RNA Polymerase II Show more
Transcription-coupled repair (TCR) is a vital nucleotide excision repair sub-pathway that removes DNA lesions from actively transcribed DNA strands. Binding of CSB to lesion-stalled RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) initiates TCR by triggering the recruitment of downstream repair factors. Yet it remains unknown how transcription factor IIH (TFIIH) is recruited to the intact TCR complex. Combining existing structural data with AlphaFold predictions, we build an integrative model of the initial TFIIH-bound TCR complex. We show how TFIIH can be first recruited in an open repair-inhibited conformation, which requires subsequent CAK module removal and conformational closure to process damaged DNA. In our model, CSB, CSA, UVSSA, elongation factor 1 (ELOF1), and specific Pol II and UVSSA-bound ubiquitin moieties come together to provide interaction interfaces needed for TFIIH recruitment. STK19 acts as a linchpin of the assembly, orienting the incoming TFIIH and bridging Pol II to core TCR factors and DNA. Molecular simulations of the TCR-associated CRL4CSA ubiquitin ligase complex unveil the interplay of segmental DDB1 flexibility, continuous Cullin4A flexibility, and the key role of ELOF1 for Pol II ubiquitination that enables TCR. Collectively, these findings elucidate the coordinated assembly of repair proteins in early TCR. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57593-0
alphafold bioinorganic conformational change crl4csa ubiquitin ligase csa csb dna dna damage
2025 · The FEBS Journal · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-21
Corrinoids are cobalt‐containing tetrapyrroles. They include adenosylcobalamin (vitamin B12) and cobamides that function as cofactors and coenzymes for methyl transfer, ra Show more
Corrinoids are cobalt‐containing tetrapyrroles. They include adenosylcobalamin (vitamin B12) and cobamides that function as cofactors and coenzymes for methyl transfer, radical‐dependent and redox reactions. Though cobamides are the most complex cofactors in nature, they are essential in the acetyl‐CoA pathway, thought to be the most ancient CO2‐fixation pathway, where they perform a pterin‐to‐cobalt‐to‐nickel methyl transfer reaction catalyzed by the corrinoid iron–sulphur protein (CoFeS). CoFeS occurs in H2‐dependent archaeal methanogens, the oldest microbial lineage by measure of physiology and carbon isotope data, dating corrinoids to ca. 3.5 billion years. However, CoFeS and cobamides are also essential in the acetyl‐CoA pathway of H2‐dependent bacterial acetogens. To determine whether corrin biosynthesis was established before archaea and bacteria diverged, whether the pathways arose independently or whether cobamide biosynthesis was transferred from the archaeal to the bacterial lineage (or vice versa) during evolution, we investigated phylogenies and structural data for 26 enzymes of corrin ring and lower ligand biosynthesis. The data trace cobamide synthesis to the common ancestor of bacteria and archaea, placing it in the last universal common ancestor of all lifeforms (LUCA), while pterin‐dependent methyl synthesis pathways likely arose independently post‐LUCA in the lineages leading to bacteria and archaea. Enzymes of corrin biosynthesis were recruited from preexisting ancient pathways. Evolutionary forerunners of CoFeS function were likely Fe‐, Ni‐ and Co‐containing solid‐state surfaces, which, in the laboratory, catalyze the reactions of the acetyl‐CoA pathway from CO2 to pyruvate under serpentinizing hydrothermal conditions. The data suggest that enzymatic corrin biosynthesis replaced insoluble solid‐state catalysts that tethered primordial CO2 assimilation to the Earth's crust, suggesting a role for corrin synthesis in the origin of free‐living cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1111/febs.17367
biochemical evolution bioinorganic co cobalamin cobamide fe ni tetrapyrroles
2025 · Discover Oncology · Springer · added 2026-04-21
Introduction Mitochondria are essential organelles for many aspects of cellular homeostasis. They play an indispensable role in the development and progression of diseases, particularly cancer which i Show more
Introduction Mitochondria are essential organelles for many aspects of cellular homeostasis. They play an indispensable role in the development and progression of diseases, particularly cancer which is a major cause of death worldwide. We analyzed the scientific research output on mitochondria and cancer via PubMed and Web of Science over the period 1990–2023. Methods Bibliometric analysis was performed by extracting data linking mitochondria to cancer pathogenesis over the period 1990–2023 from the PubMed database which has a precise and specific search engine. Only articles and reviews were considered. Since PubMed does not support analyses by countries or institutions, we utilized InCites, an analytical tool developed and marketed by Clarivate Analytics. We also used the VOSviewer software developed by the Centre for Science and Technology Studies (Bibliometric Department of Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands), which enables us to graphically represent links between countries, authors or keywords in cluster form. Finally, we used iCite, a tool developed by the NIH (USA) to access a dashboard of bibliometrics for papers associated with a portfolio. This module can therefore be used to measure whether the research carried out is still basic, translational or clinical. Results In total, 169,555 publications were identified in PubMed relating to ‘mitochondria’, of which 34,949 (20.61%) concerned ‘mitochondria’ and ‘dysfunction’ and 22,406 (13.21%) regarded ‘mitochondria’ and ‘cancer’. Hence, not all mitochondrial dysfunctions may lead to cancer or enhance its progression. Qualitatively, the disciplines of journals were classified into 166 categories among which cancer specialty accounts for only 4.7% of publications. Quantitatively, our analysis showed that cancer/neoplasms in the liver (2569 articles) were placed in the first position. USA occupied the first position among countries contributing the highest number of publications (5695 articles), whereas Egypt came in the thirty-eight position with 84 publications (0.46%). Importantly, USA is the first-ranked country having both the top 1% and 10% impact indicators with 207 and 1459 articles, respectively. By crossing the query ‘liver neoplasms’ (155,678) with the query ‘mitochondria’ (169,555), we identified 1336 articles in PubMed over the study period. Among these publications, research areas were classified into 65 categories with the highest percentage of documents included in biochemistry and molecular biology (28.92%), followed by oncology (23.31%). Conclusions This study underscores the crucial yet underrepresented role of mitochondria in cancer research. Despite their significance in cancer pathogenesis, the proportion of related publications remains relatively low. Our findings Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​s12672-​025-​ 02139-5. * Abeer El Wakil, abeer_elwakil@alexu.edu.eg; Patrick Devos, patrick.devos@univ-lille.fr; Heba Abdelmegeed, hn.abdelmegeed@ nrc.sci.eg; Alaa Kamel, alaa.kamel_pg@alexu.edu.eg | 1Department of Biological and Geological Sciences, Faculty of Education, Alexandria University, Alexandria 21526, Egypt. 2Université Lille, Lillometrics, 59000 Lille, France. 3CHU Lille, Direction de la Recherche et de l’Innovation, 59000 Lille, France. 4Department of Chemistry of Natural Compounds, National Research Centre, Giza, Egypt. 5Department of Zoology, Faulty of Science, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt. Discover Oncology (2025) 16:517 | https://doi.org/10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5 Vol.:(0123456789) Research Discover Oncology (2025) 16:517 | https://doi.org/10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5 highlight the need for further research to deepen our understanding of mitochondrial mechanisms in cancer, which could pave the way for new therapeutic strategies. Graphical Abstract Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5
bibliometric analysis bioinorganic cancer cancer research icite incites mitochondria mitochondrial dysfunction
2025 · Life · MDPI · added 2026-04-21
Geological structures known as alkaline hydrothermal vents (AHVs) likely displayed dynamic energy characteristics analogous to cellular chemiosmosis and contained iron-oxyhydroxide green rusts in the Show more
Geological structures known as alkaline hydrothermal vents (AHVs) likely displayed dynamic energy characteristics analogous to cellular chemiosmosis and contained iron-oxyhydroxide green rusts in the early Earth. Under specific conditions, those minerals could have acted as non-enzymatic catalysts in the development of early bioenergetic chemiosmotic energy systems while being integrated into the membrane of AHV-produced organic vesicles. Here, we show that the simultaneous addition of two probable AHV components, namely nickel and amino acids, impacts green rust’s physico-chemical properties, especially those required for its incorporation in lipid vesicle’s membranes, such as decreasing the mineral size to the nanometer scale and increasing its hydrophobicity. These results suggest that such hydrophobic nano green rusts could fit into lipid vesicle membranes and could have functioned as a primitive, inorganic precursor to modern chemiosmotic metalloenzymes, facilitating both electron and proton transport in early life-like systems. Accepted: 15 April 2025 Published: 19 April 2025 Citation: Gaudu, N.; Truong, C.; Farr, Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/life15040671
amino acid bioinorganic catalysis chemiosmosis fe green rust ni
2025 · RSC Chemical Biology · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
This review offers a concise overview of platinum-based anticancer complexes targeting the G-quadruplex, aiming to overcome cisplatin-resistance.
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d5cb00024f
anticancer bioinorganic cancer cell cycle arrest chemotherapy cisplatin cytoplasmic rna cytotoxicity
2025 · Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences · Springer · added 2026-04-21
Ferroptosis is a regulated form of cell death characterized by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation. It plays a crucial role in various pathological conditions, including neurodegenerative diseases, canc Show more
Ferroptosis is a regulated form of cell death characterized by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation. It plays a crucial role in various pathological conditions, including neurodegenerative diseases, cancer, ischemia–reperfusion injury, and organ failure. This review systematically explores the key mechanisms underlying ferroptosis, including polyunsaturated fatty acidcontaining phospholipid (PUFA-PL) peroxidation, iron metabolism, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Additionally, we summarize major endogenous ferroptosis defense systems, including the SLC7A11-glutathione (GSH)-glutathione peroxidase Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00018-025-05958-5
anti-inflammatory anticancer bioinorganic cancer cell membrane cellular and molecular life sciences glutathione (gsh) glutathione peroxidase 4 (gpx4)
2025 · Discover Oncology · Springer · added 2026-04-21
Introduction Mitochondria are essential organelles for many aspects of cellular homeostasis. They play an indispensable role in the development and progression of diseases, particularly cancer which i Show more
Introduction Mitochondria are essential organelles for many aspects of cellular homeostasis. They play an indispensable role in the development and progression of diseases, particularly cancer which is a major cause of death worldwide. We analyzed the scientific research output on mitochondria and cancer via PubMed and Web of Science over the period 1990–2023. Methods Bibliometric analysis was performed by extracting data linking mitochondria to cancer pathogenesis over the period 1990–2023 from the PubMed database which has a precise and specific search engine. Only articles and reviews were considered. Since PubMed does not support analyses by countries or institutions, we utilized InCites, an analytical tool developed and marketed by Clarivate Analytics. We also used the VOSviewer software developed by the Centre for Science and Technology Studies (Bibliometric Department of Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands), which enables us to graphically represent links between countries, authors or keywords in cluster form. Finally, we used iCite, a tool developed by the NIH (USA) to access a dashboard of bibliometrics for papers associated with a portfolio. This module can therefore be used to measure whether the research carried out is still basic, translational or clinical. Results In total, 169,555 publications were identified in PubMed relating to ‘mitochondria’, of which 34,949 (20.61%) concerned ‘mitochondria’ and ‘dysfunction’ and 22,406 (13.21%) regarded ‘mitochondria’ and ‘cancer’. Hence, not all mitochondrial dysfunctions may lead to cancer or enhance its progression. Qualitatively, the disciplines of journals were classified into 166 categories among which cancer specialty accounts for only 4.7% of publications. Quantitatively, our analysis showed that cancer/neoplasms in the liver (2569 articles) were placed in the first position. USA occupied the first position among countries contributing the highest number of publications (5695 articles), whereas Egypt came in the thirty-eight position with 84 publications (0.46%). Importantly, USA is the first-ranked country having both the top 1% and 10% impact indicators with 207 and 1459 articles, respectively. By crossing the query ‘liver neoplasms’ (155,678) with the query ‘mitochondria’ (169,555), we identified 1336 articles in PubMed over the study period. Among these publications, research areas were classified into 65 categories with the highest percentage of documents included in biochemistry and molecular biology (28.92%), followed by oncology (23.31%). Conclusions This study underscores the crucial yet underrepresented role of mitochondria in cancer research. Despite their significance in cancer pathogenesis, the proportion of related publications remains relatively low. Our findings Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​s12672-​025-​ 02139-5. * Abeer El Wakil, abeer_elwakil@alexu.edu.eg; Patrick Devos, patrick.devos@univ-lille.fr; Heba Abdelmegeed, hn.abdelmegeed@ nrc.sci.eg; Alaa Kamel, alaa.kamel_pg@alexu.edu.eg | 1Department of Biological and Geological Sciences, Faculty of Education, Alexandria University, Alexandria 21526, Egypt. 2Université Lille, Lillometrics, 59000 Lille, France. 3CHU Lille, Direction de la Recherche et de l’Innovation, 59000 Lille, France. 4Department of Chemistry of Natural Compounds, National Research Centre, Giza, Egypt. 5Department of Zoology, Faulty of Science, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt. Discover Oncology (2025) 16:517 | https://doi.org/10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5 Vol.:(0123456789) Research Discover Oncology (2025) 16:517 | https://doi.org/10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5 highlight the need for further research to deepen our understanding of mitochondrial mechanisms in cancer, which could pave the way for new therapeutic strategies. Graphical Abstract Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12672-025-02139-5
bibliometric analysis bioinorganic cancer cancer pathogenesis icite incites medicinal chemistry mitochondria
2025 · Current Oncology · MDPI · added 2026-04-21
Received: 25 June 2025 Revised: 8 August 2025 Accepted: 13 August 2025 Published: 14 August 2025 Citation: Jin, Z.; Zhang, Q.; Pan, Y.; Chen, H.; Zhou, K.; Cai, H.; Huang, P. Roles and Prospective App Show more
Received: 25 June 2025 Revised: 8 August 2025 Accepted: 13 August 2025 Published: 14 August 2025 Citation: Jin, Z.; Zhang, Q.; Pan, Y.; Chen, H.; Zhou, K.; Cai, H.; Huang, P. Roles and Prospective Applications of Ferroptosis Suppressor Protein 1 (FSP1) in Malignant Tumor Treatment. Curr. Oncol. 2025, 32, 456. https:// doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32080456 Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/curroncol32080456
anticancer bioinorganic breast cancer cancer cancer treatment colorectal cancer ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (fsp1) gastric cancer
2025 · Molecular Cancer · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-21
Ferroptosis, the non-apoptotic, iron-dependent form of cell death is an unavoidable outcome and byproduct of cellular metabolism. Reactive oxygen species generation during metabolic activities transce Show more
Ferroptosis, the non-apoptotic, iron-dependent form of cell death is an unavoidable outcome and byproduct of cellular metabolism. Reactive oxygen species generation during metabolic activities transcends to ­Fe2+-induced lipid peroxidation, leading to ferroptosis. Cancer cells being highly metabolic are more prone to ferroptosis. However, their neoplastic nature enables them to bypass ferroptosis and become ferroptosis-resistant. The capability of cancer cells to reprogram its metabolic activities is one of its finest abilities to abort oxidative damage, and hence ferroptosis. Moreover, the reprogrammed metabolism of cancer cells, also associates with the radical trapping antioxidant Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12943-025-02337-3
anticancer bioinorganic cancer cancer metabolism cell membrane glucose immuno-metabolic environment iron
2025 · Biomolecules · MDPI · added 2026-04-21
Carnitine O-acetyltransferase (CRAT) is a key mitochondrial enzyme involved in maintaining metabolic homeostasis by mediating the reversible transfer of acetyl groups between acetyl-CoA and carnitine. Show more
Carnitine O-acetyltransferase (CRAT) is a key mitochondrial enzyme involved in maintaining metabolic homeostasis by mediating the reversible transfer of acetyl groups between acetyl-CoA and carnitine. This enzymatic activity ensures the optimal functioning of mitochondrial carbon flux by preventing acetyl-CoA accumulation, buffering metabolic flexibility, and regulating the balance between fatty acid and glucose oxidation. CRAT’s interplay with the mitochondrial carnitine shuttle, involving carnitine palmitoyltransferases (CPT1 and CPT2) and the carnitine carrier (SLC25A20), underscores its critical role in energy metabolism. Emerging evidence highlights the structural and functional diversity of CRAT and structurally related acetyltransferases across cellular compartments, illustrating their coordinated role in lipid metabolism, amino acid catabolism, and mitochondrial bioenergetics. Moreover, the structural insights into CRAT have paved the way for understanding its regulation and identifying potential modulators with therapeutic applications for diseases such as diabetes, mitochondrial disorders, and cancer. This review examines CRAT’s structural and functional aspects, its relationships with carnitine shuttle members and other carnitine acyltransferases, and its broader role in metabolic health and disease. The potential for targeting CRAT and its associated pathways offers promising avenues for therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring metabolic equilibrium and addressing metabolic dysfunction in disease states. Luca, D.I.; Guerra, L.; Pierri, C.L.; De Grassi, A. Carnitine O-Acetyltransferase as a Central Player in Lipid and Branched-Chain Amino Acid Metabolism, Epigenetics, Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/biom15020216
bioinorganic cell plasticity enzyme epigenetics metabolism mitochondria organelle function
2025 · Chemical Science · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
Greater concentrations of hydrosulfide lead to the prebiotic formation of higher nuclearity Fe–S peptides, culminating in a putative nitrogenase-like [6Fe–9S] cluster. Higher nuclearity clusters are m Show more
Greater concentrations of hydrosulfide lead to the prebiotic formation of higher nuclearity Fe–S peptides, culminating in a putative nitrogenase-like [6Fe–9S] cluster. Higher nuclearity clusters are more stable with lower reduction potential. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d5sc00524h
bioinorganic coordination chemistry cysteinyl electrochemistry epr fe iron iron-sulfur clusters
Hugo D. Williams, Samuel J. Dettmer, Sumit Bajpai +1 more · 2025 · Journal of the American Chemical Society · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Nucleic acid junctions are key to many biological functions from recombination and repair to viral nucleic acid insertion and are an attractive, functional biomolecular target. We describe a quadruple Show more
Nucleic acid junctions are key to many biological functions from recombination and repair to viral nucleic acid insertion and are an attractive, functional biomolecular target. We describe a quadruple-stranded diplatinum helicate that binds both three-way (3WJ) and four-way DNA junctions (4WJ). This allows us to probe the relative importance of size and shape in junction-binder design. Despite the helicate's tetragonal symmetry/shape being compatible with the 4WJ, microscale thermophoresis (MST), isothermal calorimetry (ITC), and gel electrophoresis competition experiments demonstrate that this metallo-supramolecule displays a stronger affinity for 3WJs (Kd = 12 nM) than for 4WJs (Kd > 4 μM) and other DNA structures. The experimental findings are supported by molecular dynamics simulations that reveal the critical role of size. While the open form of the 4WJ is promoted when the helicate is in the cavity, the helicate's small size means it is unable to maintain π contacts with all four junction base-pairs simultaneously. Although the helicate is slightly too large for the smaller 3WJ cavity, simulations and experiments show that it can open up the cavity (increasing the junction's hydrodynamic radius) by disrupting a base pair. The flexible helicate also responds to the cavity upon binding by favoring one enantiomer and allowing the helicate to adopt a stable final structure inside the 3WJ that is an induced fit of the two dynamic structures (supramolecule and DNA). This contrasts with previous lock-and-key examples of junction recognition and opens up new possibilities for how to design DNA and RNA junction-binding compounds. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c14580
binding bioinorganic coordination chemistry diplatinum helicate disrupting a base pair dna four-way junction gel electrophoresis
2025 · Signal transduction and targeted therapy · Nature · added 2026-04-21
Mitochondria are the energy production centers in cells and have unique genetic information. Due to the irreplaceable function of mitochondria, mitochondrial dysfunction often leads to pathological ch Show more
Mitochondria are the energy production centers in cells and have unique genetic information. Due to the irreplaceable function of mitochondria, mitochondrial dysfunction often leads to pathological changes. Mitochondrial dysfunction induces an imbalance between oxidation and antioxidation, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage, mitochondrial dynamics dysregulation, and changes in mitophagy. It results in oxidative stress due to excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, which contributes to cell damage and death. Mitochondrial dysfunction can also trigger inflammation through the activation of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), inflammasomes and inflammatory cells. Besides, mitochondrial alterations in the functional regulation, energy metabolism and genetic stability accompany the aging process, and there has been a lot of evidence suggesting that oxidative stress and inflammation, both of which are associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, are predisposing factors of aging. Therefore, this review hypothesizes that mitochondria serve as central hubs regulating oxidative stress, inflammation, and aging, and their dysfunction contributes to various diseases, including cancers, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, metabolic diseases, sepsis, ocular pathologies, liver diseases, and autoimmune conditions. Moreover, we outline therapies aimed at various mitochondrial dysfunctions, highlighting their performance in animal models and human trials. Additionally, we focus on the limitations of mitochondrial therapy in clinical applications, and discuss potential future research directions for mitochondrial therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41392-025-02253-4
aging autoimmune conditions bioinorganic cancer cardiovascular diseases cell damage dna inflammation
2025 · Amino Acids · Springer · added 2026-04-21
Claudin (CLDN) proteins are extensively studied due to their critical role in maintaining tissue barriers and cell polarity. However, significant gaps remain in understanding the functional mechanisms Show more
Claudin (CLDN) proteins are extensively studied due to their critical role in maintaining tissue barriers and cell polarity. However, significant gaps remain in understanding the functional mechanisms of their sequence motifs and the molecular mechanisms of their interactions with other tight junction proteins. This review systematically examines the multifunctional properties of the CLDN protein family from the perspectives of sequence and structure. During evolution, CLDN family members have developed highly conserved structural features, particularly key conserved sites within the first Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00726-025-03479-w
amino acids bioinorganic cancer cell membrane cell polarity cell survival cellular proliferation infection
2024 · Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-21
The Keap1-Nrf2 signaling pathway plays a crucial role in cellular defense against oxidative stress-induced damage. Its activation entails the expression and transcriptional regulation of several prote Show more
The Keap1-Nrf2 signaling pathway plays a crucial role in cellular defense against oxidative stress-induced damage. Its activation entails the expression and transcriptional regulation of several proteins involved in detoxification and antioxidation processes within the organism. Keap1, serving as a pivotal transcriptional regulator within this pathway, exerts control over the activity of Nrf2. Various post-translational modifications (PTMs) of Keap1, such as alkylation, glycosylation, glutathiylation, S-sulfhydration, and other modifications, impact the binding affinity between Keap1 and Nrf2. Consequently, this leads to the accumulation of Nrf2 and its translocation to the nucleus, and subsequent activation of downstream antioxidant genes. Given the association between the Keap1-Nrf2 signaling pathway and various diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, and diabetes, comprehending the post-translational modification of Keap1 not only deepens our understanding of Nrf2 signaling regulation but also contributes to the identification of novel drug targets and biomarkers. Consequently, this knowledge holds immense importance in the prevention and treatment of diseases induced by oxidative stress. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1332049
antioxidant antioxidation bioinorganic cancer cellular defense detoxification diabetes genes
2024 · Essays in Biochemistry · added 2026-04-20
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) played a pivotal role in the early evolution of life on Earth before the predominance of atmospheric oxygen. The legacy of a persistent role for H2S in life's processes recently Show more
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) played a pivotal role in the early evolution of life on Earth before the predominance of atmospheric oxygen. The legacy of a persistent role for H2S in life's processes recently emerged through its discovery in modern biochemistry as an endogenous cellular signalling modulator involved in numerous biological processes. One major mechanism through which H2S signals is protein cysteine persulfidation, an oxidative post-translational modification. In recent years, chemoproteomic technologies have been developed to allow the global scanning of protein persulfidation targets in mammalian cells and tissues, providing a powerful tool to elucidate the broader impact of altered H2S in organismal physiological health and human disease states. While hundreds of proteins were confirmed to be persulfidated by global persulfidome methodologies, the targeting of specific proteins of interest and the investigation of further mechanistic studies are still underdeveloped due to a lack of stringent specificity of the methods and the inherent instability of persulfides. This review provides an overview of the processes of endogenous H2S production, oxidation, and signalling and highlights the application and limitations of current persulfidation labelling approaches for investigation of this important evolutionarily conserved biological switch for protein function. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1042/ebc20230095
biochemistry bioinorganic chemoproteomic cysteine human disease hydrogen sulfide mass spectrometry oxidative post-translational modification
2024 · Redox Biology 73 · Elsevier · added 2026-04-21
Although 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is the primary chemotherapy treatment for colorectal cancer (CRC), its efficacy is limited by drug resistance. Ferroptosis activation is a promising treatment for 5-FU-r Show more
Although 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is the primary chemotherapy treatment for colorectal cancer (CRC), its efficacy is limited by drug resistance. Ferroptosis activation is a promising treatment for 5-FU-resistant cancer cells; however, potential therapeutic targets remain elusive. This study investigated ferroptosis vulnerability and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) activity using stable, 5-FU-resistant CRC cell lines and xenograft models. Ferroptosis was characterized by measuring malondialdehyde levels, assessing lipid metabolism and peroxidation, and using mitochondrial imaging and assays. DHODH function is investigated through gene knockdown experiments, tumor behavior assays, mitochondrial import reactions, intramitochondrial localization, enzymatic activity analyses, and metabolomics assessments. Intracellular lipid accumulation and mitochondrial DHODH deficiency led to lipid peroxidation overload, weakening the defense system of 5-FU-resistant CRC cells against ferroptosis. DHODH, primarily located within the inner mitochondrial membrane, played a crucial role in driving intracellular pyrimidine biosynthesis and was redistributed to the cytosol in 5-FU-resistant CRC cells. Cytosolic DHODH, like its mitochondrial counterpart, exhibited dihydroorotate catalytic activity and participated in pyrimidine biosynthesis. This amplified intracellular pyrimidine pools, thereby impeding the efficacy of 5-FU treatment through molecular competition. These findings contribute to the understanding of 5-FU resistance mechanisms and suggest that ferroptosis and DHODH are promising therapeutic targets for patients with CRC exhibiting resistance to 5-FU. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2024.103207
5-fluorouracil anticancer bioinorganic cancer chemoresistance colorectal cancer dihydroorotate dehydrogenase lipid metabolic reprogramming
2024 · Bioinformatics · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-21
Motivation: Drug–target interaction (DTI) prediction is a relevant but challenging task in the drug repurposing field. In-silico approaches have drawn particular attention as they can reduce associate Show more
Motivation: Drug–target interaction (DTI) prediction is a relevant but challenging task in the drug repurposing field. In-silico approaches have drawn particular attention as they can reduce associated costs and time commitment of traditional methodologies. Yet, current state-of-the-art methods present several limitations: existing DTI prediction approaches are computationally expensive, thereby hindering the ability to use large networks and exploit available datasets and, the generalization to unseen datasets of DTI prediction methods remains unexplored, which could Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btad774
bioinformatics bioinorganic data mining drug drug repurposing drug-target interaction prediction graph neural networks in-silico
2024 · RSC Chemical Biology · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d3cb00106g
antioxidant bioinorganic chemical biology cysteine go analysis histidine hydrogen sulfide kegg analysis
2024 · · Frontiers · added 2026-04-20
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental biological process for maintaining cellular equilibrium and regulating development, health, and disease across all living organisms. Among the various type Show more
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental biological process for maintaining cellular equilibrium and regulating development, health, and disease across all living organisms. Among the various types of PCD, apoptosis plays a pivotal role in numerous diseases, notably cancer. Cancer cells frequently develop mechanisms to evade apoptosis, increasing resistance to standard chemotherapy treatments. This resistance has prompted extensive research into alternative mechanisms of programmed cell death. One such pathway is oncosis, characterized by significant energy consumption, cell swelling, dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrial swelling, and nuclear chromatin aggregation. Recent research suggests that oncosis can impact conditions such as chemotherapeutic cardiotoxicity, myocardial ischemic injury, stroke, and cancer, mediated by specific oncosis-related proteins. In this review, we provide a detailed examination of the morphological and molecular features of oncosis and discuss various natural or small molecule compounds that can induce this type of cell death. Additionally, we summarize the current understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying oncosis and its role in both normal physiology and pathological conditions. These insights aim to illuminate future research directions and propose innovative strategies for leveraging oncosis as a therapeutic tool against human diseases and cancer resistance. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1450998
bioinorganic cancer cardiotoxicity cell death pathway cell membrane chemotherapeutic cardiotoxicity chromatin aggregation endoplasmic reticulum
2024 · Accounts of Chemical Research · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-21
Life is an exergonic chemical reaction. The same was true when the very first cells emerged at life's origin. In order to live, all cells need a source of carbon, energy, and electrons to drive their Show more
Life is an exergonic chemical reaction. The same was true when the very first cells emerged at life's origin. In order to live, all cells need a source of carbon, energy, and electrons to drive their overall reaction network (metabolism). In most cells, these are separate pathways. There is only one biochemical pathway that serves all three needs simultaneously: the acetyl-CoA pathway of CO2 fixation. In the acetyl-CoA pathway, electrons from H2 reduce CO2 to pyruvate for carbon supply, while methane or acetate synthesis are coupled to energy conservation as ATP. This simplicity and thermodynamic favorability prompted Georg Fuchs and Erhard Stupperich to propose in 1985 that the acetyl-CoA pathway might mark the origin of metabolism, at the same time that Steve Ragsdale and Harland Wood were uncovering catalytic roles for Fe, Co, and Ni in the enzymes of the pathway. Subsequent work has provided strong support for those proposals.In the presence of Fe, Co, and Ni in their native metallic state as catalysts, aqueous H2 and CO2 react specifically to formate, acetate, methane, and pyruvate overnight at 100 °C. These metals (and their alloys) thus replace the function of over 120 enzymes required for the conversion of H2 and CO2 to pyruvate via the pathway and its cofactors, an unprecedented set of findings in the study of biochemical evolution. The reactions require alkaline conditions, which promote hydrogen oxidation by proton removal and are naturally generated in serpentinizing (H2-producing) hydrothermal vents. Serpentinizing hydrothermal vents furthermore produce natural deposits of native Fe, Co, Ni, and their alloys. These are precisely the metals that reduce CO2 with H2 in the laboratory; they are also the metals found at the active sites of enzymes in the acetyl-CoA pathway. Iron, cobalt and nickel are relicts of the environments in which metabolism arose, environments that still harbor ancient methane- and acetate-producing autotrophs today. This convergence indicates bedrock-level antiquity for the acetyl-CoA pathway. In acetogens and methanogens growing on H2 as reductant, the acetyl-CoA pathway requires flavin-based electron bifurcation as a source of reduced ferredoxin (a 4Fe4S cluster-containing protein) in order to function. Recent findings show that H2 can reduce the 4Fe4S clusters of ferredoxin in the presence of native iron, uncovering an evolutionary precursor of flavin-based electron bifurcation and suggesting an origin of FeS-dependent electron transfer in proteins. Traditionally discussed as catalysts in early evolution, the most common function of FeS clusters in metabolism is one-electron transfer, also in radical SAM enzymes, a large and ancient enzyme family. The cofactors and active sites in enzymes of the acetyl-CoA pathway uncover chemical antiquity in metabolism involving metals, methyl groups, methyl transfer reactions, cobamides, pterins, GTP, S-adenosylmethionine, radical SAM enzymes, and carbon-metal bonds. The reaction sequence from H2 and CO2 to pyruvate on naturally deposited native metals is maximally simple. It requires neither nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus, RNA, ion gradients, nor light. Solid-state metal catalysts tether the origin of metabolism to a H2-producing, serpentinizing hydrothermal vent. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.4c00226
bioinorganic catalysis co coordination chemistry enzyme fe ferredoxin ni
Helmut Sies, Ryan J Mailloux, Ursula Jakob · 2024 · Nature reviews. Molecular cell biology · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions are central to the existence of life. Reactive species of oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur mediate redox control of a wide range of essential cellular processes. Yet, Show more
Oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions are central to the existence of life. Reactive species of oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur mediate redox control of a wide range of essential cellular processes. Yet, excessive levels of oxidants are associated with ageing and many diseases, including cardiological and neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer. Hence, maintaining the fine-tuned steady-state balance of reactive species production and removal is essential. Here, we discuss new insights into the dynamic maintenance of redox homeostasis (that is, redox homeodynamics) and the principles underlying biological redox organization, termed the 'redox code'. We survey how redox changes result in stress responses by hormesis mechanisms, and how the lifelong cumulative exposure to environmental agents, termed the 'exposome', is communicated to cells through redox signals. Better understanding of the molecular and cellular basis of redox biology will guide novel redox medicine approaches aimed at preventing and treating diseases associated with disturbed redox regulation. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41580-024-00730-2
bioinorganic cancer cardiovascular cells hormesis medicinal chemistry neurodegeneration oxidants