Lucía Tapia, Yolanda Pérez, Israel Carreira-Barral, Jordi Bujons, Michael Bolte, Carmen Bedia, Jordi Solà, Roberto Quesada, Ignacio Alfonso
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Tuning pH-dependent cytotoxicity in cancer cells by peripheral fluorine substitution on pseudopeptidic cages
The acidic microenvironment of solid tumors is a potential source of selectivity in the anti-cancer activity of ionophores, which requires delicate control of their biophysical properties. In this context, we have systematically studied fluorine substitutions in the aromatic side chains of HCl-binding pseudopeptidic cages. Interconnected factors like chloride binding, protonation, lipophilicity, and conformation and diffusiveness of the cages can impact their ability to transport HCl through the aqueous-lipid interphase, as demonstrated by robust experimental (X-ray, nuclear magnetic resonance [NMR], fluorescence) and theoretical results. The fine-tuning of these properties allows the modulation of their pH-dependent cytotoxicity against cancer cells, from essentially non-cytotoxic at pH 7.5 (like the extracellular surroundings of healthy tissues) to highly toxic in slightly acidic microenvironments (like those around solid tumors). Thus, a distal fluorine substitution produces a big impact on the physicochemical and biological properties of the cages, improving their selectivity as potential therapeutic ionophores.
期刊介绍:
Cell Reports Physical Science, a premium open-access journal from Cell Press, features high-quality, cutting-edge research spanning the physical sciences. It serves as an open forum fostering collaboration among physical scientists while championing open science principles. Published works must signify significant advancements in fundamental insight or technological applications within fields such as chemistry, physics, materials science, energy science, engineering, and related interdisciplinary studies. In addition to longer articles, the journal considers impactful short-form reports and short reviews covering recent literature in emerging fields. Continually adapting to the evolving open science landscape, the journal reviews its policies to align with community consensus and best practices.