Platinum-group metal half-sandwich complexes of sugar-isoxazol(in)e conjugates – synthesis
and evaluation of their antineoplastic and antimicrobial activities
Platinum-group metal half-sandwich complexes are considered to be potential replacements
of the clinically widely used platins which have several side effects and tend to
cause resistance to develop. In our previous works, we used a range of 2-pyridyl-substituted
N- and C-glycosyl heterocycles as N,N-chelating ligands to prepare ruthenium(II),
osmium(II), iridium(III) and rhodium(III) polyhapto arene/arenyl half-sandwich complexes.
Some of these complexes, particularly with the C-glucopyranosyl isoxazole derived
ligand in its Operbenzoylated form, exhibited greater anticancer efficiency than cisplatin
and had minimal or negligible effects on non-transformed fibroblasts. Additionally,
these cytostatic compounds exhibited micromolar antibacterial activity against multiresistant
Gram-positive bacteria.
In the present work, novel modes of conjugation between the sugar and the isoxazole
moieties have been studied. Specifically, glycosylidene-spiro-isoxazoline and polyhydroxyalkylisoxazole
scaffolds were synthesised and utilised in complex formation reactions. The spiro-isoxazolines
were obtained in 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions of exo-glycals and nitrile oxides generated
from pyridine-2-carbaldoximes. Ring opening of the spiroisoxazolines under basic or
transition-metal-mediated conditions produced polyhydroxyalkylisoxazoles. These compounds
were then transformed into their Operacetylated, O-perbenzoylated and O-unprotected
variants, which were used for complex formation with the above-mentioned platinum-group
metal ions.
The complexes induced cytostasis in cellular models of ovarian cancer and pancreatic
adenocarcinoma; the best compounds had submicromolar IC50 values (0.4-0.5 µM). A subset
of the cytostatic complexes retained their activity on cisplatin resistant ovarian
cancer cells. Furthermore, a reasonable therapeutic index was detected when complexes
were assessed on primary human fibroblasts pointing towards a potential applicability
of the complexes. Unexpectedly, none of the complexes induced bacteriostasis in Gram-positive
bacteria as Staphylococcus aureus or Enterococcus species.