Research Article Details

Article ID: A33013
PMID: 26863200
Source: Inorg Chem
Title: Hydrosulfide Adducts of Organo-Iridium Anticancer Complexes.
Abstract: Novel half-sandwich hydrosulfidoiridium(III) complexes [(&#951;(5)-Cp*)Ir(phen)(SH)]PF6 (1), [(&#951;(5)-Cp*)Ir(bpy)(SH)]PF6 (2), [(&#951;(5)-Cp(biph))Ir(phen)(SH)]PF6 (3), and [(&#951;(5)-Cp(biph))Ir(bpy)(SH)]PF6 (4) were prepared from the chlorido complexes by dechlorination and treatment with excess NaSH&#183;xH2O; phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, Cp* = 1,2,3,4,5-pentamethylcyclopentadienyl, and Cp(biph) = 1,2,3,4-tetramethyl-5-biphenylcyclopentadienyl. Complexes 1-4 were characterized by various techniques including electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, NMR spectroscopy (&#948;(SH) ca. -2 ppm), and a single-crystal X-ray analysis. Complex [(&#951;(5)-Cp*)Ir(phen)(SH)]BPh4 (1') shows a typical piano-stool geometry with Ir-S bond length of 2.388(2) &#197;. Cp(biph) complexes 3 (IC50 = 0.98 &#956;M) and 4 (IC50 = 0.61 &#956;M) showed significantly higher (p < 0.005) in vitro antiproliferative activity against A2780 human ovarian cancer cells, as compared with their Cp* analogues 1 (IC50 = 49.5 &#956;M) and 2 (IC50 = 48.4 &#956;M), and potency similar to the anticancer drug cisplatin. The complexes were relatively stable in aqueous solution toward hydrolysis and reactions with reduced glutathione (GSH), 9-ethylguanine, or 9-methyladenine. Interestingly, GSH was readily oxidized to glutathione disulfide in the presence of Cp(biph) complexes 3 and 4, as judged by (1)H NMR, perhaps indicative of a possible redox-linked mechanism of action.
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.5b02697