Photocontrolled activation of doubly o-nitrobenzyl-protected small molecule benzimidazoles leads to cancer cell death

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Abstract

Artificial biomimetic chloride anionophores have shown promising applications as anticancer scaffolds. Importantly, stimuli-responsive chloride transporters that can be selectively activated inside the cancer cells to avoid undesired toxicity to normal, healthy cells are very rare. Particularly, light-responsive systems promise better applicability for photodynamic therapy because of their spatiotemporal controllability, low toxicity, and high tunability. Here, in this work, we report o-nitrobenzyl-linked, benzimidazole-based singly and doubly protected photocaged protransporters 2a, 2b, 3a, and 3b, respectively, and benzimidazole-2-amine-based active transporters 1a-1d. Among the active compounds, trifluoromethyl-based anionophore 1a showed efficient ion transport activity (EC50 = 1.2 ± 0.2 μM). Detailed mechanistic studies revealed Cl−/NO3− antiport as the main ion transport process. Interestingly, double protection with photocages was found to be necessary to achieve the complete “OFF-state” that could be activated by external light. The procarriers were eventually activated inside the MCF-7 cancer cells to induce phototoxic cell death.

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APA

Ahmad, M., Roy, N. J., Singh, A., Mondal, D., Mondal, A., Vijayakanth, T., … Talukdar, P. (2023). Photocontrolled activation of doubly o-nitrobenzyl-protected small molecule benzimidazoles leads to cancer cell death. Chemical Science, 14(33), 8897–8904. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sc01786a

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