The mechanism by which the most relevant ruthenium anticancer drugs are activated in tumors to commence their tumor-inhibiting action remains one of the challenging research tasks of present-day metallomics. This contribution aims to capture and identify eventually more reactive species of one of two bis-indazole tetrachloridoruthenate(iii) compounds that are progressing in clinical trials. In view of the fact that the transport of ruthenium into cancer cells is governed by transferrin receptors, the susceptibility of the Ru drug adduct with holo-transferrin to exposure by glutathione and ascorbic acid (at their cancer cytosol concentrations) was studied by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), following isolation of the reaction products by ultrafiltration. Next, capillary electrophoresis coupled to ICP-MS was applied to monitor changes in the Ru speciation both under simulated cancer cytosol conditions and in real cytosol and to assign the charge state of novel metal species. The latter were identified by using tandem electrospray ionization MS in the respective ion mode. The formation of ruthenium(ii) species was for the first time revealed, in which the central metal is coordinated by the reduced (GSH) or the oxidized (GSSG) form of glutathione, i.e. [Ru II HindCl 4 (GSH)] 2- and [Ru II HindCl 4 (GSSG)] 2-, respectively (Hind = indazole). Ascorbic acid released the ruthenium functionality from the protein-bound form in a different way, the products of adduct cleavage containing aqua ligands. Distribution of low-molecular mass species of Ru in human cytosol was found to have very much in common with the ruthenium speciation assayed under simulated cytosol conditions. © 2014 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
CITATION STYLE
Matczuk, M., Prza̧dka, M., Aleksenko, S. S., Czarnocki, Z., Pawlak, K., Timerbaev, A. R., & Jarosz, M. (2014). Metallomics for drug development: A further insight into intracellular activation chemistry of a ruthenium(iii)-based anticancer drug gained using a multidimensional analytical approach. Metallomics, 6(1), 147–153. https://doi.org/10.1039/c3mt00252g
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