Apoptosis-independent organoruthenium anticancer complexes that overcome multidrug resistance: Self-assembly and phenotypic screening strategies

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Abstract

Multidrug resistance is a major impediment to chemotherapy and limits the efficacies of conventional anticancer drugs. A strategy to bypass multidrug resistance is to develop new drug candidates capable of inducing apoptosis-independent programmed cell death. However, cellular pathways implicated in alternative programmed cell death are not well-elucidated and multifactorial, making a target-based discovery approach a challenge. Here, we show that a coordination-directed three-component assembly and phenotypic screening strategy could be employed as a viable alternative for the identification of apoptosis-independent organoruthenium anticancer agents. Through an on-plate synthesis and screening of 195 organoruthenium complexes against apoptosis-sensitive and -resistant cancers, we identified two apoptosis-independent hits. Subsequent validation of the two hits showed a lack of induction of apoptotic biomarkers, a caspase-independent activity and an equal efficacy in both apoptosis-sensitive and -resistant colorectal cancers. This validated their apoptosis-independent modes-of-action, paving the way as potential candidates for the treatment of highly-refractory cancer phenotypes.

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APA

Chow, M. J., Alfiean, M., Pastorin, G., Gaiddon, C., & Ang, W. H. (2017). Apoptosis-independent organoruthenium anticancer complexes that overcome multidrug resistance: Self-assembly and phenotypic screening strategies. Chemical Science, 8(5), 3641–3649. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7sc00497d

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