posted on 2019-01-14, 20:36authored byReece
G. Kenny, Celine J. Marmion
While medicinal inorganic
chemistry has been practised for over
5000 years, it was not until the late 1800s when Alfred Werner published
his ground-breaking research on coordination chemistry that we began
to truly understand the nature of the coordination bond and the structures
and stereochemistries of metal complexes. We can now readily manipulate
and fine-tune their properties. This had led to a multitude of complexes
with wide-ranging biomedical applications. This review will focus
on the use and potential of metal complexes as important therapeutic
agents for the treatment of cancer. With major advances in technologies
and a deeper understanding of the human genome, we are now in a strong
position to more fully understand carcinogenesis at a molecular level.
We can now also rationally design and develop drug molecules that
can either selectively enhance or disrupt key biological processes
and, in doing so, optimize their therapeutic potential. This has heralded
a new era in drug design in which we are moving from a single- toward
a multitargeted approach. This approach lies at the very heart of
medicinal inorganic chemistry. In this review, we have endeavored
to showcase how a “multitargeted” approach to drug design
has led to new families of metallodrugs which may not only reduce
systemic toxicities associated with modern day chemotherapeutics but
also address resistance issues that are plaguing many chemotherapeutic
regimens. We have focused our attention on metallodrugs incorporating
platinum and ruthenium ions given that complexes containing these
metal ions are already in clinical use or have advanced to clinical
trials as anticancer agents. The “multitargeted” complexes
described herein not only target DNA but also contain either vectors
to enable them to target cancer cells selectively and/or moieties
that target enzymes, peptides, and intracellular proteins. Multitargeted
complexes which have been designed to target the mitochondria or complexes
inspired by natural product activity are also described. A summary
of advances in this field over the past decade or so will be provided.