posted on 2024-05-06, 17:37authored bySiyu Xu, Yashuai Hao, Xinyi Xu, Lu Huang, Yuqiong Liang, Jia Liao, Jie-Ru Yang, Yang Zhou, Mingdong Huang, Ke-Zhao Du, Cen Zhang, Peng Xu
Using copper-ionophores to translocate extracellular
copper into
mitochondria is a clinically validated anticancer strategy that has
been identified as a new type of regulated cell death termed “cuproptosis.”
This study reports a mitochondria-targeting Cu(I) complex, Cu(I)Br(PPh3)3 (CBP), consisting of a cuprous ion coordinated
by three triphenylphosphine moieties and a Br atom. CBP exhibited
antitumor and antimetastatic efficacy in vitro and in vivo by specifically targeting mitochondria instigating
mitochondrial dysfunction. The cytotoxicity of CBP could only be reversed
by a copper chelator rather than inhibitors of the known cell death,
indicating copper-dependent cytotoxicity. Furthermore, CBP induced
the oligomerization of lipoylated proteins and the loss of Fe–S
cluster proteins, consistent with characteristic features of cuproptosis.
Additionally, CBP induced remarkable intracellular generation of reactive
oxygen species (ROS) through a Fenton-like reaction, indicating a
complex antitumor mechanism. This is a proof-of-concept study exploiting
the antitumor activity and mechanism of the Cu(I)-based mitochondria-targeting
therapy.