2024-07-16
Nitric oxide (•NO) plays various pathophysiological roles in breast cancer, significantly influencing the migration of tumour cells through concentration gradients. Therefore, modulating •NO levels via selective scavenging presents a promising approach to treating aggressive •NO-dependent cancers, such as triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Hemin emerges as a potential scavenger of •NO; however, its metalloporphyrin molecules tend to aggregate in physiological solutions, which limits its biomedical applications. To address this, a modification strategy is employed to minimize aggregation and protect against physiological oxidative degradation while preserving •NO-scavenging properties. This is achieved through a simple chemical transformation that involves hemin conjugation to aromatic residues, tyrosine, and tyramine via carbodiimide reactions. These derivatives exhibit altered electronic properties and oxidation potential compared to hemin, alongside reduced aggregation tendencies and retained •NO-binding affinity in aqueous solutions. Furthermore, depending on the type of hemin derivative, there is an associated inhibition of TNBC cell migration. These model hemin compounds demonstrate varying •NO-binding affinities and resistance levels to oxidative degradation and aggregation, offering insights into the design of •NO-scavenging molecules with enhanced properties for cancer treatment.
Article
Versió publicada
Anglès
15 p.
Wiley-VCH
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), co-funded under the European Regional Development Fund under Grant number 13/RC/2073_P2
the College of Engineering and Informatics Scholarship Scheme, University of Galway, Ireland and the Irish Research Council under grant number GOIPD/2023/1640.
S.G. is funded by a Science Foundation Ireland Career Development Award (17/CDA/4638)
J.R.G.M. thanks Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación for support through Severo Ochoa Excellence Accreditation 2020–2023 (CEX2019-000925-S, MIC/AEI) and the project PID2021-124796OB-I00; the Generalitat de Catalunya (2017-SGR-1406), and the CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya
J.W. acknowledges a Freigeist fellowship of the Volkswagen foundation and support from the MS core facility Leipzig.
CC BY 4.0
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