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Inhibition of NF-κB-Mediated Proinflammatory Transcription by Ru(II) Complexes of Anti-Angiogenic Ligands in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Ayan Chakraborty, Shilpendu Ghosh, Manas Pratim Chakraborty, S Mukherjee, Shantanu Saha Roy, Rahul Das, Moulinath Acharya, Arindam Mukherjee

2024Journal of Medicinal Chemistry10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Nuclear factor kappa beta (NF-κB) plays a pivotal role in breast cancer, particularly triple-negative breast cancer, by promoting inflammation, proliferation, epithelial–mesenchymal transition, metastasis, and drug resistance. Upregulation of NF-κB boosts vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression, assisting angiogenesis. The Ru(II) complexes of methyl- and dimethylpyrazolyl-benzimidazole N, N donors inhibit phosphorylation of ser536 in p65 and translocation of the NF-κB heterodimer (p50/p65) to the nucleus, disabling transcription to upregulate inflammatory signaling. The methyl- and dimethylpyrazolyl-benzimidazole inhibit VEGFR2 phosphorylation at Y1175, disrupting downstream signaling through PLC-γ and ERK1/2, ultimately suppressing Ca(II)-signaling. Partial release of the antiangiogenic ligand in a reactive oxygen species-rich environment is possible as per our observation to inhibit both NF-κB and VEGFR2 by the complexes. The complexes are nontoxic to zebrafish embryos up to 50 μM, but the ligands show strong in vivo antiangiogenic activity at 3 μM during embryonic growth in Tg(fli1:GFP) zebrafish but no visible effect on the adult phase.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryZebrafishProinflammatory cytokineCancer researchDownregulation and upregulationAngiogenesisPhosphorylationTranscription factorNF-κBVascular endothelial growth factorIκBαSignal transductionCell biologyInflammationBiochemistryBiologyImmunologyVEGF receptorsGeneInflammatory mediators and NSAID effectsBioactive Compounds and Antitumor AgentsNF-κB Signaling Pathways
Inhibition of NF-κB-Mediated Proinflammatory Transcription by Ru(II) Complexes of Anti-Angiogenic Ligands in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer | Litcius