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Dynamic supramolecular self-assembly of platinum(ii) complexes perturbs an autophagy–lysosomal system and triggers cancer cell death
Authors:Ka-Chung Tong  Pui-Ki Wan  Chun-Nam Lok  Chi-Ming Che
Institution:State Key Laboratory of Synthetic Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong China.; Laboratory for Synthetic Chemistry and Chemical Biology Limited, Units 1503-1511, 15/F., Building 17W, Hong Kong Science Park, New Territories, Hong Kong China
Abstract:Self-assembly of platinum(ii) complexes to form supramolecular structures/nanostructures due to intermolecular ligand π–π stacking and metal–ligand dispersive interactions is widely used to develop functional molecular materials, but the application of such non-covalent molecular interactions has scarcely been explored in medical science. Herein is described the unprecedented biological properties of platinum(ii) complexes relevant to induction of cancer cell death via manifesting such intermolecular interactions. With conjugation of a glucose moiety to the planar platinum(ii) terpyridyl scaffold, the water-soluble complex Pt(tpy)(C Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019 CArOGlu)](CF3SO3) (1a, tpy = 2,2′:6′,2′′-terpyridine, Glu = glucose) is able to self-assemble into about 100 nm nanoparticles in physiological medium, be taken up by lung cancer cells via energy-dependent endocytosis, and eventually transform into other superstructures distributed in endosomal/lysosomal and mitochondrial compartments apparently following cleavage of the glycosidic linkage. Accompanying the formation of platinum-containing superstructures are increased autophagic vacuole formation, lysosomal membrane permeabilization, and mitochondrial membrane depolarization, as well as anti-tumor activity of 1a in a mouse xenograft model. These findings highlight the dynamic, multi-stage extracellular and intracellular supramolecular self-assembly of planar platinum(ii) complexes driven by modular intermolecular interactions with potential anti-cancer application.

Self-assembly of platinum(ii) glycosylated arylacetylide gave transformable superstructures upon enzymatic action in cellulo, leading to perturbation of an autophagy-lysosomal system and cancer cell death.
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