A green light-triggerable RGD peptide for photocontrolled targeted drug delivery: synthesis and photolysis studies

Author

Gandioso, Albert

Cano, Marc

Massaguer i Vall-llovera, Anna

Marchán Sancho, Vicente

Publication date

2017-02-13T14:42:08Z

2017-11-09T23:01:20Z

2016-11-09

2017-02-13T14:42:08Z

Abstract

We describe for the first time the synthesis and photochemical properties of a coumarin-caged cyclic RGD peptide and demonstrate that uncaging can be efficiently performed with biologically compatible green light. This was accomplished by using a new dicyanocoumarin derivative (DEAdcCE) for the protection of the carboxyl function at the side chain of the aspartic acid residue, which was selected on the basis of Fmoc-tBu SPPS compatibility and photolysis efficiency. The shielding effect of a methyl group incorporated in the coumarin derivative near the ester bond linking both moieties in combination with the use of acidic additives such as HOBt or Oxyma during the basic Fmoc-removal treatment were found to be very effective for minimizing aspartimide-related side reactions. In addition, a conjugate between the dicyanocoumarin-caged cyclic RGD peptide and ruthenocene, which was selected as a metallodrug model cargo, has been synthesized and characterized. The fact that green-light triggered photoactivation can be efficiently performed both with the caged peptide and with its ruthenocenoyl bioconjugate reveals great potential for DEAdcCE-caged peptide sequences as selective drug carriers in the context of photocontrolled targeted anticancer strategies.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Síntesi de pèptids; Cèl·lules canceroses; Síntesi orgànica; Llum; Peptide synthesis; Cancer cells; Organic synthesis; Light

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.6b02415

Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2016, vol. 81, num. 23, p. 11556-11564

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.6b02415

Rights

(c) American Chemical Society , 2016

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