Cellular Uptake of the ATSM−Cu(II) Complex under Hypoxic Conditions

Gulshan R. Walke, Shelly Meron, Yulia Shenberger, Lada Gevorkyan-Airapetov, Sharon Ruthstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Cu(II)-diacetyl-bis (N4-methylthiosemicarbazone) complex (ATSM−Cu(II)) has been suggested as a promising positron emission tomography (PET) agent for hypoxia imaging. Several in-vivo studies have shown its potential to detect hypoxic tumors. However, its uptake mechanism and its specificity to various cancer cell lines have been less studied. Herein, we tested ATSM−Cu(II) toxicity, uptake, and reduction, using four different cell types: (1) mouse breast cancer cells (DA-3), (2) human embryonic kidney cells (HEK-293), (3) breast cancer cells (MCF-7), and (4) cervical cancer cells (Hela) under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. We showed that ATSM−Cu(II) is toxic to breast cancer cells under normoxic and hypoxic conditions; however, it is not toxic to normal HEK-293 non-cancer cells. We showed that the Cu(I) content in breast cancer cell after treatment with ATSM−Cu(II) under hypoxic conditions is higher than in normal cells, despite that the uptake of ATSM−Cu(II) is a bit higher in normal cells than in breast cancer cells. This study suggests that the redox potential of ATSM−Cu(II) is higher in breast cancer cells than in normal cells; thus, its toxicity to cancer cells is increased.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)486-492
Number of pages7
JournalChemistryOpen
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH GmbH

Funding

G.W. was partly supported by a Colman‐Soref postdoctoral fellowship. This work was supported by ERC‐STG grant no. 754365. G.W. was partly supported by a Colman-Soref postdoctoral fellowship. This work was supported by ERC-STG grant no. 754365.

FundersFunder number
ERC-STG
ERC‐STG
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme754365

    Keywords

    • ATSM−Cu(II)
    • cancer
    • copper homeostasis
    • copper toxicity

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