Issue 12, 2012

Contrasting cellular uptake pathways for chlorido and iodido iminopyridine ruthenium arene anticancer complexes

Abstract

The pathways involved in cellular uptake and accumulation of iminopyridine complexes of general formula [Ru(η6-p-cymene)(N,N-dimethyl-N′-[(E)-pyridine-2-ylmethylidene]benzene-1,4-diamine)X]PF6 bearing two different halido ligands X = Cl or I, have been explored. The ratio of passive/active cellular accumulation of Ru in A2780 human ovarian cancer cells is compared and contrasted with cisplatin. Also, saturation of cellular uptake, time-dependence of cellular influx/efflux equilibria, together with endocytotic pathways such as caveolae and facilitated diffusion are investigated and discussed. Temperature dependence studies of Ru accumulation in the A2780 cells show that in contrast to cisplatin (CDDP) and chlorido complex 1, which are taken up largely through active transport, the iodido complex 2 enters cells via passive transport. The cellular efflux of Ru is slow (ca. 25% retained after 72 h) and is partially inhibited by verapamil, implicating the P-gp protein in the efflux mechanism. Ouabain inhibition experiments suggest that the cellular uptake of these ruthenium complexes relies at least in part on facilitated diffusion, and in particular is dependent on the membrane potential. In addition the finding that depletion of cellular ATP with antimycin A had little effect on cellular Ru accumulation from iodido complex 2 is consistent with passive diffusion. In contrast, ATP depletion caused a major increase in cellular accumulation of ruthenium from chlorido complex 1.

Graphical abstract: Contrasting cellular uptake pathways for chlorido and iodido iminopyridine ruthenium arene anticancer complexes

Supplementary files

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Sep 2012
Accepted
30 Oct 2012
First published
09 Nov 2012
This article is Open Access

Metallomics, 2012,4, 1271-1279

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