Issue 37, 2023

Biotin and boron-dipyrromethene-tagged platinum(iv) prodrug for cellular imaging and mito-targeted photocytotoxicity in red light

Abstract

A platinum(IV) prodrug, cis,cis,trans-[Pt(NH3)2Cl2(biotin)(L)] (1), derived from cisplatin, where HL is the PEGylated red-light active boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) ligand, was synthesized, characterized and its photocytotoxicity evaluated. The complex showed a near-IR absorption band at 653 nm (ε ∼9.19 × 104 M−1 cm−1) in dimethyl sulfoxide and Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline (1 : 1 v/v) at pH 7.2. When excited at 630 nm, it showed an emission band at 677 nm in DMSO with a fluorescence quantum yield of 0.13. The 1,3-diphenylisobenzofuran titration experiment gave a singlet oxygen quantum yield (ΦΔ) of ∼0.32. A mechanistic DNA photocleavage study revealed singlet oxygen as the reactive oxygen species (ROS). The complex with biotin and PEGylated-distyryl-BODIPY showed significantly higher cellular uptake in A549 cancer cells as compared to non-cancerous Beas-2B cells from flow cytometry, indicating selectivity towards cancer cells. A dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate assay showed cellular ROS generation. Confocal images revealed predominant internalization in the mitochondria. The prodrug showed remarkable photodynamic therapy (PDT) activity in cancerous A549 and multidrug-resistant MDA-MB-231 cells with a high photocytotoxicity index value (half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50): 0.61–1.54 μM in red light), while being non-toxic in the dark. The chemo-PDT activity was significantly less in non-tumorigenic lung epithelial cells (Beas-2B). The prodrug effectively triggered cellular apoptosis, which was confirmed by the Annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide assay, and the alteration of the mitochondrial membrane potential was substantiated by the JC-1 dye assay. The β-tubulin immunofluorescence assay confirmed that incubating the cells with a light-treated complex resulted in the rapture of the cytoskeletal structure and the formation of apoptotic bodies. The results demonstrate that the prodrug triggered apoptosis via DNA damage, a reduction in mitochondrial function and disruption of the cytoskeletal framework.

Graphical abstract: Biotin and boron-dipyrromethene-tagged platinum(iv) prodrug for cellular imaging and mito-targeted photocytotoxicity in red light

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Jun 2023
Accepted
21 Aug 2023
First published
23 Aug 2023

Dalton Trans., 2023,52, 13339-13350

Biotin and boron-dipyrromethene-tagged platinum(IV) prodrug for cellular imaging and mito-targeted photocytotoxicity in red light

A. Bera, A. Nepalia, A. Upadhyay, D. Kumar Saini and A. R. Chakravarty, Dalton Trans., 2023, 52, 13339 DOI: 10.1039/D3DT01796F

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