Artigo Revisado por pares

Ruthenium anticancer compounds: myths and realities of the emerging metal-based drugs

2011; Royal Society of Chemistry; Volume: 40; Issue: 31 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1039/c0dt01816c

ISSN

1477-9234

Autores

Alberta Bergamo, Gianni Sava,

Tópico(s)

Ferrocene Chemistry and Applications

Resumo

Ruthenium anticancer drugs have attracted an increasing interest in the last 20 years and two of them have entered clinical trials. Compared to platinum drugs, the complexes based on ruthenium are often identified as less toxic and capable of overcoming the resistance induced by platinum drugs in cancer cells. These activities were attributed to the transportation to tumour cells by transferrin and to the selective activation to more reactive species by the reducing environment of solid tumours as compared to healthy tissues. Ruthenium anticancer drugs have been almost always designed to mimic platinum drugs, particularly for targeting DNA. Indeed, none of the above properties has never been clearly demonstrated even for the ruthenium drugs that entered clinical trials. The suggestion for the future is to change the perspective when designing new chemical entities, abandoning the philosophy that guided the actual panel of ruthenium drugs and to look further into the fine mechanism by which the most relevant ruthenium complexes available kill the target tumour cells, then focusing on targets selective of tumour cells and responsible for cell growth and malignancy.

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