In Vitro Biological Activity of α-Diimine Rhenium Dicarbonyl Complexes and Their Reactivity with Different Functional Groups

Author:

Schindler Kevin1ORCID,Horner Justine12ORCID,Demirci Gozde1ORCID,Cortat Youri1,Crochet Aurélien1ORCID,Mamula Steiner Olimpia2ORCID,Zobi Fabio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, Fribourg University, Chemin Du Musée 9, 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland

2. Haute école d’ingénierie et d’architecture HEIA-FR, University of Applied Sciences of Western Switzerland, HES-SO, Pérolles 80, 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland

Abstract

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide. The interest in organometallic complexes as anticancer drug candidates continues to be pivotal for many researchers. Initially underestimated for their therapeutic potentials, rhenium complexes are now slowly gaining momentum. While tricarbonyl complexes of rhenium are widely investigated, dicarbonyl derivatives of the cis-[Re(CO)2]+ core remain largely unexplored. In this study, we tested in vitro a variety of rhenium dicarbonyl complexes for their activity towards three cancer cell lines (A549, MCF-7 and HCT116) and one healthy cell line (HEK293). The most lipophilic compounds showed, like the tricarbonyl species, good activity against specific cancer lines (IC50 = 1.5–2.5 µM); however, the same were also toxic towards healthy cells. In order to understand these differences, we performed a reactivity study of cis-[Re(CO)2(NN)]+ species (where NN = diimine) with biologically relevant functional groups (-COOH, -NH2, -SH and aromatic nitrogen-based ligands) and compared the chemistry to what is known for the fac-[Re(CO)3]+ core. Overall, we found that the rhenium dicarbonyl complexes only show good reactivity with aromatic nitrogen-based ligands. The reaction of cis-[Re(CO)2(NN)]+ species with common bio-functional groups leads, rather, to the formation of bis-diimine dicarbonyl complexes (cis-[Re(CO)2(NN)2]+) as the major by-product.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry

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