4.7 Article

Anticancer therapeutic potential of Mn porphyrin/ascorbate system

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 89, Issue -, Pages 1231-1247

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2015.10.416

Keywords

Mn porphyrin; Ascorbate; Catalysis; Cancer cells; Cytotoxicity; Tumor growth suppression; SOD mimics; Hydrogen peroxide; MnTE-2-PyP

Funding

  1. SFRBM
  2. Kuwait University [MB02/12, YM04/14, SRUL02/13]
  3. [5-P30-CA14236-29]
  4. [NIH R01 E5023485]
  5. [R21 ES 025632]

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Ascorbate (Asc) as a single agent suppressed growth of several tumor cell lines in a mouse model. It has been tested in a Phase I Clinical Trial on pancreatic cancer patients where it exhibited no toxicity to normal tissue yet was of only marginal efficacy. The mechanism of its anticancer effect was attributed to the production of tumoricidal hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) during ascorbate oxidation catalyzed by endogenous metalloproteins. The amount of H2O2 could be maximized with exogenous catalyst that has optimized properties for such function and is localized within tumor. Herein we studied 14 Mn porphyrins (MnPs) which differ vastly with regards to their redox properties, charge, size/bulkiness and lipophilicity. Such properties affect the in vitro and in vivo ability of MnPs (i) to catalyze ascorbate oxidation resulting in the production of H2O2; (ii) to subsequently employ H2O2 in the catalysis of signaling proteins oxidations affecting cellular survival pathways; and (iii) to accumulate at site(s) of interest. The metal-centered reduction potential of MnPs studied, E-1/2 of (MnP)-P-III/(MnP)-P-II redox couple, ranged from -200 to + 350 mV vs NHE. Anionic and cationic, hydrophilic and lipophilic as well as short- and long-chained and bulky compounds were explored. Their ability to catalyze ascorbate oxidation, and in turn cytotoxic H2O2 production, was explored via spectrophotometric and electrochemical means. Bell-shape structure-activity relationship (SAR) was found between the initial rate for the catalysis of ascorbate oxidation, v(o)(Asc)(ox) and E-1/2, identifying cationic Mn(III) N-substituted pyridylporphyrins with E1/2 > 0 mV vs NHE as efficient catalysts for ascorbate oxidation. The anticancer potential of MnPs/Asc system was subsequently tested in cellular (human MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 and mouse 4T1) and animal models of breast cancer. At the concentrations where ascorbate (1 mM) and MnPs (1 or 5 mu M) alone did not trigger any alteration in cell viability, combined treatment suppressed cell viability up to 95%. No toxicity was observed with normal human breast epithelial HBL-100 cells. Bell-shape relationship, essentially identical to v(o)(Asc)(ox), vs E(1/)2, was also demonstrated between MnP/Asc-controlled cytotoxicity and E-1/2-controlled v(o)(Asc)(ox). Magnetic resonance imaging studies were conducted to explore the impact of ascorbate on T1-relaxivity. The impact of MnP/Asc on intracellular thiols and on GSH/GSSG and Cys/CySS ratios in 4T1 cells was assessed and cellular reduction potentials were calculated. The data indicate a significant increase in cellular oxidative stress induced by MnP/Asc. Based on v(o)(Asc)(ox) vs E1/2 relationships and cellular toxicity, MnTE-2-PyP5+ was identified as the best catalyst among MnPs studied. Asc and MnTE-2-PyP5+ were thus tested in a 4T1 mammary mouse flank tumor model. The combination of ascorbate (4 g/kg) and MnTE-2-PyP5+ (0.2 mg/kg) showed significant suppression of tumor growth relative to either MnTE-2-PyP5+ or ascorbate alone. About 7-fold higher accumulation of MnTE-2-PyP5+ in tumor vs normal tissue was found to contribute largely to the anticancer effect. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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