Monosaccharides are added to the hydrophilic face of a self-assembled asymmetric FeII metallohelix, using CuAAC chemistry. The sixteen resulting architectures are water-stable and optically pure, and exhibit improved antiproliferative selectivity against colon cancer cells (HCT116 p53+/+) with respect to the non-cancerous ARPE-19 cell line. While the most selective compound is a glucose-appended enantiomer, its cellular entry is not mainly glucose transporter-mediated. Glucose conjugation nevertheless increases nuclear delivery ca 2.5-fold, and a non-destructive interaction with DNA is indicated. Addition of the glucose units affects the binding orientation of the metallohelix to naked DNA, but does not substantially alter the overall affinity. In a mouse model, the glucose conjugated compound was far better tolerated, and tumour growth delays for the parent compound (2.6 d) were improved to 4.3 d; performance as good as cisplatin but with the advantage of no weight loss in the subjects.
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Song, H., Allison, S. J., Brabec, V., Bridgewater, H. E., Kasparkova, J., Kostrhunova, H., … Scott, P. (2020). Glycoconjugated Metallohelices have Improved Nuclear Delivery and Suppress Tumour Growth In Vivo. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 59(34), 14677–14685. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202006814