Photoactivatable prodrug for simultaneous release of mertansine and CO along with a BODIPY derivative as a luminescent marker in mitochondria: a proof of concept for NIR image-guided cancer therapy
Title | Photoactivatable prodrug for simultaneous release of mertansine and CO along with a BODIPY derivative as a luminescent marker in mitochondria: a proof of concept for NIR image-guided cancer therapy |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2021 |
Authors | Tiwari, R, Shinde, PS, Sreedharan, S, Dey, AKumar, Vallis, KA, Mhaske, SB, Pramanik, Skumar, Das, A |
Journal | Chemical Science |
Volume | 12 |
Issue | 7 |
Pagination | 2667-2673 |
Date Published | FEB |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 2041-6520 |
Abstract | Controlled and efficient activation is the crucial aspect of designing an effective prodrug. Herein we demonstrate a proof of concept for a light activatable prodrug with desired organelle specificity. Mertansine, a benzoansamacrolide, is an efficient microtubule-targeting compound that binds at or near the vinblastine-binding site in the mitochondrial region to induce mitotic arrest and cell death through apoptosis. Despite its efficacy even in the nanomolar level, this has failed in stage 2 of human clinical trials owing to the lack of drug specificity and the deleterious systemic toxicity. To get around this problem, a recent trend is to develop an antibody-conjugatable maytansinoid with improved tumor/organelle-specificity and lesser systematic toxicity. Endogenous CO is recognized as a regulator of cellular function and for its obligatory role in cell apoptosis. CO blocks the proliferation of cancer cells and effector T cells, and the primary target is reported to be the mitochondria. We report herein a new mitochondria-specific prodrug conjugate (Pro-DC) that undergoes a photocleavage reaction on irradiation with a 400 nm source (1.0 mW cm(-2)) to induce a simultaneous release of the therapeutic components mertansine and CO along with a BODIPY derivative (BODIPY(PPH3)(2)) as a luminescent marker in the mitochondrial matrix. The efficacy of the process is demonstrated using MCF-7 cells and could effectively be visualized by probing the intracellular luminescence of BODIPY(PPH3)(2). This provides a proof-of-concept for designing a prodrug for image-guided combination therapy for mainstream treatment of cancer. |
DOI | 10.1039/d0sc06270g |
Type of Journal (Indian or Foreign) | Foreign |
Impact Factor (IF) | 9.825 |
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