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Enhancing the Activity of Drugs by Conjugation to Organometallic Fragments

Prinessa Chellan, Peter J. Sadler

2020Chemistry - A European Journal125 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Resistance to chemotherapy is a current clinical problem, especially in the treatment of microbial infections and cancer. One strategy to overcome this is to make new derivatives of existing drugs by conjugation to organometallic fragments, either by an appropriate linker, or by direct coordination of the drug to a metal. We illustrate this with examples of conjugated organometallic metallocene sandwich and half‐sandwich complexes, Ru II and Os II arene, and Rh III and Ir III cyclopentadienyl half‐sandwich complexes. Ferrocene conjugates are particularly promising. The ferrocene–chloroquine conjugate ferroquine is in clinical trials for malaria treatment, and a ferrocene‐tamoxifen derivative (a ferrocifen) seems likely to enter anticancer trails soon. Several other examples illustrate that organometallic conjugation can restore the activity of drugs to which resistance has developed.

Topics & Concepts

FerroceneConjugateCyclopentadienyl complexLinkerCombinatorial chemistryGroup 2 organometallic chemistryMetalloceneChemistryConjugated systemDerivative (finance)DrugStereochemistryOrganic chemistryPharmacologyMedicineMoleculePolymerCatalysisComputer scienceElectrodeEconomicsMathematical analysisElectrochemistryMathematicsOperating systemPhysical chemistryPolymerizationFinancial economicsFerrocene Chemistry and ApplicationsOrganometallic Complex Synthesis and CatalysisSynthesis and Biological Evaluation
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