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Exploring biologically relevant chemical space with metal complexes Eric Meggers Altering biological processes with small synthetic molecules is a general approach for the design of drugs and molecular probes. Medicinal chemistry and chemical biology are focused predominately on the design of organic molecules, whereas inorganic compounds find applications mainly for their reactivity (e.g. cisplatin as a DNA-reactive therapeutic) or imaging properties (e.g. gadolinium complexes as MRI diagnostics). In such inorganic pharmaceuticals or probes, coordination chemistry in the biological environment or at the target site lies at the heart of their modes of action. However, past and very recent results suggest that it is also worth exploring a different aspect of metal complexes: their ability to form structures with unique and defined shapes for the design of ‘organic-like’ small-molecule probes and drugs. In such metal–organic compounds, the metal has the main purpose to organize the organic ligands in three-dimensional space. It is likely that such an approach will complement the molecular diversity of organic chemistry in the quest for the discovery of compounds with superior biological activities. Addresses Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, 231 South 34th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA Corresponding author: Meggers, Eric ([email protected]) Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 This review comes from a themed issue on Combinatorial chemistry and molecular diversity Edited by Gregory A Weiss and Richard Roberts Available online 4th June 2007 1367-5931/$ – see front matter # 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. DOI 10.1016/j.cbpa.2007.05.013 Introduction The identification of compounds with novel and defined biological functions is of high importance for research in medicinal chemistry and chemical biology. The total number of theoretically accessible compounds with biological activity span the ‘biologically relevant chemical space’ [1]. Charting this subset of the chemical space is focused primarily on small organic molecules. In this respect one might wonder whether organic-based scaffolds are capable of covering all areas of the biologically relevant chemical space in an efficient fashion. To address this question, it is interesting to explore the opportunities of inorganic elements to help build small compounds with defined three-dimensional structures. Transition metals appear www.sciencedirect.com especially appealing for this purpose because they can support a multitude of coordination numbers and geometries that go far beyond the linear (sp-hybridization), trigonal planar (sp2-hybridization) and tetrahedral (sp3hybridization) binding geometries of carbon (Figure 1). For example, it is intriguing that an octahedral center with six different substituents is capable of forming 30 stereoisomers compared with just two for an asymmetric tetrahedral carbon [2]. Thus, by increasing the number of substituents from four (tetrahedral center) to six (octahedral center), the ability of the center to organize substituents in the three-dimensional space increases substantially. In addition, using a hexavalent center could provide new synthetic opportunities for accessing globular shapes by building structures from a single center in six different directions. Inorganic pharmaceuticals play an important role in clinical therapy (e.g. cisplatin) and diagnostics (e.g. MRI contrast agents) [3]. For these classes of inorganic compounds the coordination chemistry itself is at the heart of the mode of action. This short review is limited to past and current research activities that aim to design metal complexes with biological activities in which the metal center mainly serves as a structural center for organizing the presentation of organic ligands at the binding site of protein targets. Pioneering work by Dwyer More than half a century ago, the Australian chemist Francis Dwyer started to investigate the biological activities of simple coordination complexes such as ruthenium complexes with 2,20 -bipyridine and 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) ligands [4–8]. He discovered that some very hydrophobic complexes (e.g. Figure 2a) displayed bacteriostatic and bacteriocidal activities and were capable of inhibiting tumor growth in a mouse xenograph model [5,6]. Interestingly, fluorescence microscopy studies demonstrated that these dicationic ruthenium complexes were able to pass the cellular membrane and were found to localize in the mitochondria [6]. The ruthenium complexes also caused paralysis and respiratory failure after intraperitoneal (IP) injection into mice at high concentrations, apparently owing to their potent direct inhibition of acetylcholinesterase [7]. Investigations into the biological stability of [Ru(phen)3](ClO4)2] confirmed that the ruthenium complex after IP injection into mice was not metabolized and excreted mainly unchanged in the urine [8]. Because of the coordinative saturation of the coordination sphere, their chemical and biological stabilities, Dwyer drew the following important conclusion: ‘Such Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 288 Combinatorial chemistry and molecular diversity Figure 1 Transition metals provide an expanded set of coordination geometries for the generation of molecular diversity. doubly charged pre-formed Ru(II) chelates are stable in boiling concentrated acids or alkali and in animal tissues. Hence their biological effects depend solely on the physico-chemical properties of the Ru(II) complex cation as a whole since no ruthenium ion or ligand is liberated’ [6]. Ruthenium complexes as protein kinase inhibitors Following Dwyer’s spirit, Meggers and coworkers developed organoruthenium compounds as protein kinase inhibitors [9,10,11,12,13,14]. For this, the class of ATPcompetitive indolocarbazole alkaloids (e.g. staurosporine, Figure 3a) was used as a lead structure. The indolocarbazole alkaloid scaffold was replaced with simple metal complexes in which the main features of the indolocarbazole aglycon are retained in the metal-chelating pyridocarbazole ligand, whereas the carbohydrate is replaced by a ruthenium fragment. Following this design strategy, nanomolar and even subnanomolar ATP-competitive ruthenium-based inhibitors for different protein kinases were discovered (e.g. Figures 2b and 3b), some of them by combinatorial chemistry [12,14]. These compounds are air-stable, stable in water, and can even withstand millimolar concentrations of thiols. This stability is due to the inert character of typical coordinative bonds to ruthenium. This, together with the modest price of its starting material RuCl3, its low toxicity, and its predictable and established synthetic chemistry, makes ruthenium possibly the most attractive metal for establishing octahedral or pseudo-octahedral coordination geometries. It was furthermore demonstrated that such ruthenium compounds can function within mammalian cells [10,13], Xenopus embryos [10] and zebrafish embryos [13]. Recent cocrystal structures confirm that these compounds bind to the ATP-binding site of protein kinases [11]. For example, Figure 3b shows an organoruthenium half-sandwich complex bound to the ATP-binding site of Pim-1. Importantly, the ruthenium center is not involved in any direct interactions and has solely a structural role. Furthermore, superposition of the binding positions of cocrystalized ruthenium complex and staurosporine (PDB code 1YHS) with Pim-1 demonstrates Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 how closely the ruthenium complex mimics the binding mode of staurosporine (Figure 3c). The pyridocarbazole ligand perfectly mimics the position of the indolocarbazole moiety of staurosporine, whereas the cyclopentadienyl ring and the CO group occupy the binding position of the carbohydrate moiety of staurosporine. Mimicking the structure of natural products with metal complexes Whereas the work on metal-based kinase inhibitors used the class of indolocarbazole alkaloids primarily as an inspiration, it is also desirable to mimic the structure and function of natural products more closely to gain more efficient access to a complex three-dimensional structure and to add desired physicochemical properties. The latter is what Katzenellenbogen and coworkers had in mind when they designed rhenium complexes as mimics of the structure of steroid hormones [15–17]. Steroid receptors are often overexpressed in cancer cells and are therefore a target in the design of radiolabeled small-molecule diagnostics (e.g. Tc-99m) and therapeutics (e.g. Re-186 and Re-188) for cancer detection and treatment, respectively [16]. Katzenellenbogen’s group reported the bis-bidentate oxorhenium(V) complex shown in Figure 2d, which is a remarkable structural and stereochemical mimic of the androgen 5a-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) as can also be seen from the comparison of the two space-filling models in Figure 2d [17]. An exciting aspect of this study is that the metal center fulfils a dual purpose. Unfortunately, the instability of such rhenium compounds with bidentate ligands precludes in vivo applications. Bioorganometallic chemistry with ferrocene The organometallic sandwich compound ferrocene is an interesting building block for the design of biologically active molecules because of its unique structure, its robustness in aqueous solutions, and its favorable redox properties [18]. For example, Metzler-Nolte and coworkers incorporated the organometallic amino acid 10 aminoferrocene-1-carboxylic acid into peptides to induce www.sciencedirect.com Biologically relevant metal complexes Meggers 289 Figure 2 Towards chemical biology with metal complexes. (a) Ruthenium complex with antibacterial and antitumor activity. (b) Nanomolar inhibitors for the protein kinases GSK-3a (left) and MSK1 (right). (c) 10 -Aminoferrocene-1-carboxylic acid induces turns in peptides. (d) A bis(bidentate) rhenium(V) complex mimics the structure of dihydrotestosterone. (e) Organometallic estrogen receptor modulator ferrocifen derived from the drug tamoxifen. (f) [Fe(EDTA)(H2O)] binds to the periplasmic nickel transporter NikA. (g) Copper complex as HIV-1 protease inhibitor. (h) AMD3100 binds with high affinity to the CXCR4 coreceptor and this binding is enhanced in the presence of zinc ions. turns (Figure 2c) [19]. In this system, the peptides are arranged in an antiparallel b-sheet-like arrangement stabilized by intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Because turn structures and b-sheets are important recognition motifs in protein–protein interactions, it can by expected that ferrocene serves as an interesting building block for turn-containing peptidomimetics. In another application of ferrocene in bio-organometallic chemistry, Jaouen and coworkers developed simple www.sciencedirect.com organometallic analogs of tamoxifen [20]. Tamoxifen (Figure 2e) is an antagonist of the estrogen receptor (ER) and widely used in the clinic for the treatment of hormone-dependent breast cancer. The organometallic analog ferrocifen (Figure 2e), which bears an additional hydroxyl group and has one phenyl group replaced by a bulky and hydrophobic ferrocene moiety, exhibits strong antiproliferative effects [21]. It is thought that ferrocifen, in analogy to tamoxifen, suppresses estradiol-mediated DNA transcription by binding to ERa. However, it was Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 290 Combinatorial chemistry and molecular diversity Figure 3 Ruthenium complexes as ATP-competitive protein kinase inhibitors. (a) Shape mimicry: staurosporine as a lead structure. (b) Cocrystal structure of a pseudo-octahedral ruthenium half-sandwich compound with protein kinase Pim-1 (PDB code 2BZI). (c) The superimposed cocrystal structure of Pim-1 with staurosporine (gray color, PDB code 1YHS) demonstrates the close match in binding mode between the natural product and the organometallic complex. recently discovered that ferrocifen displays strong antiproliferative activities both in hormone-dependent (contain ER) and hormone-independent (lack ER) breast cancer cells, indicating a distinguished mode of action [20]. Because the ruthenium derivative does not show the same cytotoxicity profile, it is assumed that the prominent redox properties of ferrocene play an important role. A sequence of oxidation, deprotonation, and further oxidation could generate an electrophile that is capable of damaging DNA or reacting with proteins [22]. Thus, in ferrocifene, the organometallic unit fulfils both a structural and reactive role. Related uses of metal complexes It is apparent that for in vitro and in vivo applications, metal complexes with kinetically inert bonds are highly desirable. However, multidentate ligands such as the hexadentate ligand ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA) can form highly stable complexes even with kinetically very Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 labile metals. Fontecilla-Camps and coworkers found serendipitously that the heptacoordinated pentagonal bipyramidal iron complex [Fe(EDTA)(H2O)] (Figure 2f) binds tightly to the periplasmic nickel transport protein NikA [23]. A 1.8 Å cocrystal structure is shown in Figure 4 and demonstrates that the complex is bound through a combination of hydrogen bonds, electrostatic, and hydrophobic contacts. Accordingly, carboxylate groups of EDTA hydrogen bond with Arg97 and Arg137 and form three additional water-mediated contacts. This is supplemented by a set of hydrophobic contacts between methylene groups of EDTA and Met27, Tyr22, Trp100, and Trp398. Especially the two tryptophans serve as wedges that complement the shape of the iron EDTA complex. Importantly, the iron does not form any direct coordinative bond with NikA residues and thus has mainly the purpose to organize the structure of the EDTA ligand. However, one can postulate an unshielded cation-p interaction between the iron ion and Trp398, with an indole-to-metal www.sciencedirect.com Biologically relevant metal complexes Meggers 291 Figure 4 of the most potent members of this family is the bicyclam AMD3100 (Figure 2), which is in clinical trials for the treatment of AIDS. The anti-HIV activity correlates with its binding to the coreceptor protein CXCR4. Interestingly, the complexation of Zn(II) enhances the binding strength to CXCR4 and also its anti-HIV activity [28]. Conclusions Binding of the iron complex [Fe(EDTA)(H2O)] to the periplasmic nickel transporter NikA (PDB code 1ZLQ). Important amino acids are highlighted. W, water. distance of 5.5 Å [23]. Interestingly, NikA has the natural function to bind to Ni(II) ions; however, the affinity to [Fe(EDTA)(H2O)] exceeds substantially the affinity to Ni(II) ions, and thus the authors suggest that a similar natural metallophore is involved in periplasmic Ni(II) transport by NikA. A promising strategy for the recognition of proteins by metal complexes makes use of a combination of recognition through the ligand sphere with direct coordination to the target site. Only two examples will be discussed here. Reboud-Ravaux and coworkers developed copper complexes as substrate competitive inhibitors for HIV-1 protease [24,25]. For example, [bis-(2-pyridylcarbonyl)amido] copper(II) nitrate dihydrate (Figure 2g) binds with an inhibition constant of 480 mM [24]. Molecular modeling suggests that the catalytic water between Asp25 and Asp125 of HIV-1 protease is directly coordinated to the Cu(II) ion. A current drawback of this class of compounds is the hydrolytical instability of the Cu(II) complexes. One could potentially overcome this problem by designing suitable multidentate ligands or by choosing more kinetically inert metal ions. Sadler and coworkers investigated the binding of metal complexes of 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane (cyclam) macrocycles to the CXCR4 coreceptor and lysozyme as a model protein (Figure 2h) [26,27]. In such metallocyclam complexes, the metal is supposed to function by controlling the conformation and configuration of the macrocycle. Additional direct coordinative bonds with the target protein can be formed with the vacant axial coordination sites. One www.sciencedirect.com Metal compounds provide new opportunities for building structures with unique and defined three-dimensional globular shapes in an economical fashion, and thus complement molecular diversity created by purely organic scaffolds. This access to unexplored chemical space could lead to the discovery of molecules with unprecedented properties. A key aspect for using metal-containing compounds as structural scaffolds is the kinetic stability of the coordination sphere in the biological environment. This can be accomplished with multidentate ligands or, more generally, by employing kinetically inert metals such as ruthenium. Future work will increasingly rely on combinatorial chemistry of metal complex libraries followed by screening against selected targets or even phenotypic assays. Furthermore, it is also appealing to complement the structural role of metals with their special physicochemical, reactive, and/or catalytic properties in one molecule to yield compounds with new abilities to probe and modulate biological processes. Acknowledgements EM thanks the University of Pennsylvania and the US National Institutes of Health (R01 GM071695) for financial support. References and recommended reading Papers of particular interest, published within the annual period of review, have been highlighted as: of special interest of outstanding interest 1. Koch MA, Schuffenhauer A, Scheck M, Wetzel S, Casaulta M, Odermatt A, Ertl P, Waldmann H: Charting biologically relevant chemical space: a structural classification of natural products (SCONP). Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2005, 102:17272-17277. 2. Miessler GL, Tarr DA: Coordination Chemistry I: Structures and Isomers. In Inorganic Chemistry. Prentice Hall, 3rd edition, 2003:299-336. 3. Orvig C, Abrams MJ, (Eds.): Medicinal inorganic chemistry. Chem Rev 1999, 99:2201–2204. 4. Dwyer FP, Gyarfas EC, Rogers WP, Koch JH: Biological activity of complex ions. Nature 1952, 170:190-191. 5. Dwyer FP, Mayhew E, Roe EMF, Shulman A: Inhibition of Landschütz ascites tumour growth by metal chelates derived from 3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline. Br J Cancer 1965, 19:195-199. 6. Dwyer FP, Reid IK, Shulman A, Laycock GM, Dixson S: The biological actions of 1,10-phenanthroline and 2,20 -bipyridine hydrochlorides, quaternary salts and metal chelates and related compounds. 1. Bacteriostatic action on selected Gram-positive, Gram-negative and acid-fast bacteria. Aust J Exp Biol Med Sci 1969, 47:203-218. 7. Dwyer FP, Gyarfas EC, Wright RD, Shulman A: Effect of inorganic complex ions on transmission at a neuromuscular junction. Nature 1957, 179:425-426. Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 292 Combinatorial chemistry and molecular diversity 8. Koch JH, Rogers WP, Dwyer FP, Gyarfas EC: The metabolic fate of tris-1,10-phenanthroline ruthenium-106 (II) perchlorate, a compound with anticholinesterase and curare-like activity. Aust J Biol Sci 1957, 10:342-350. 9. Bregman H, Williams DS, Atilla GE, Carroll PJ, Meggers E: An Organometallic inhibitor for glycogen synthase kinase 3. J Am Chem Soc 2004, 126:13594-13595. 10. Williams DS, Atilla GE, Bregman H, Arzoumanian A, Klein PS, Meggers E: Switching on a signaling pathway with an organometallic ruthenium complex. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2005, 44:1984-1987. 11. Debreczeni JÉ, Bullock AN, Atilla GE, Williams DS, Bregman H, Knapp S, Meggers E: Ruthenium half-sandwich complexes bound to protein kinase Pim-1. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2006, 45:1580-1585. This article demonstrates nicely how organometallic compounds can make use of their unique structural opportunities to fill an enzyme active site. 12. Bregman H, Carroll PJ, Meggers E: Rapid access to unexplored chemical space by ligand scanning around a ruthenium center: discovery of potent and selective protein kinase inhibitors. J Am Chem Soc 2006, 128:877-884. 13. Atilla-Gokcumen GE, Williams DS, Bregman H, Pagano N, Meggers E: Organometallic compounds with biological activity: a very selective and highly potent cellular inhibitor for glycogen synthase kinase 3. ChemBioChem 2006, 7:1443-1450. The presented results demonstrate the usefulness of organometallic compounds as molecular probes in cultured cells and whole organisms. 14. Bregman H, Meggers E: Ruthenium half-sandwich complexes as protein kinase inhibitors: an N-succinimidyl ester for rapid derivatizations of the cyclopentadienyl moiety. Org Lett 2006, 8:5465-5468. 15. Chi DY, Katzenellenbogen JA: Selective formation of heterodimeric bis-bidentate aminothiol-oxometal complexes of rhenium(V). J Am Chem Soc 1993, 115:7045-7046. 16. Hom RK, Katzenellenbogen JA: Technetium-99m-labeled receptor-specific small-molecule radiopharmaceuticals: recent developments and encouraging results. Nucl Med Biol 1997, 24:485-498. 17. Hom RK, Chi DY, Katzenellenbogen JA: Heterodimeric bis(amino thiol) complexes of oxorhenium(V) that mimic the structure of steroid hormones. Synthesis and stereochemical issues. J Org Chem 1996, 61:2624-2631. 18. Van Staveren DR, Metzler-Nolte N: Bioorganometallic chemistry of ferrocene. Chem Rev 2004, 104:5931-5985. 19. Barisic L, Cakic M, Mahmoud KA, Liu Y, Kraatz H-B, Pritzkow H, Kirin SI, Metzler-Nolte N, Rapic V: Helically chiral ferrocene peptides containing 10 -aminoferrocene-1-carboxylic acid subunits as turn inducers. Chemistry 2006, 12:4965-4980. Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2007, 11:287–292 The authors present a detailed structural study of peptides containing the organometallic amino acid 10 -aminoferrocene-1-carboxylic acid. 20. Jaouen G, Top S, Vessières A, Leclercq G, McGlinchey MJ: The first organometallic selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) and their relevance to breast cancer. Curr Med Chem 2004, 11:2505-2517. 21. Top S, Tang J, Vessières A, Carrez D, Provot C, Jaouen G: Ferrocenyl hydroxytamoxifen: a prototype for a new range of oestradiol receptor site-directed cytotoxics. Chem Commun 1996:955-956. 22. Hillard E, Vessières A, Thouin L, Jaouen G, Amatore C: Ferrocene mediated proton-coupled electron transfer in a series of ferrocifen-type breast-cancer drug candidates. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2006, 45:285-290. This work proposes a mechanism for the oxidative activation of ferrocifen-type organometallics. 23. Cherrier MV, Martin L, Cavazza C, Jacquamet L, Lemaire D, Gaillard J, Fontecilla-Camps JC: Crystallographic and spectroscopic evidence for high affinity binding of FeEDTA(H2O)S to the periplasmic nickel transporter NikA. J Am Chem Soc 2005, 127:10075-10082. The crystal structure is a wonderful example of how coordination complexes can fit perfectly into protein binding sites. 24. Lebon F, de Rosny E, Reboud-Ravaux M, Durant F: De novo design of a new copper chelate molecule acting as HIV-1 protease inhibitor. Eur J Med Chem 1998, 33:733-737. 25. Lebon F, Boggetto N, Ledecq M, Durant F, Benatallah Z, Sicsic S, Lapouyade R, Kahn O, Mouithys-Mickalad A, Deby-Dupont G, Reboud-Ravaux M: Metal-organic compounds: a new approach for drug discovery N1-(4-methyl-2-pyridyl)-2,3, 6-trimethoxybenzamide copper(II) complex as an inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus 1 protease. Biochem Pharmacol 2002, 63:1863-1873. 26. Hunter TM, McNae IW, Liang X, Bella J, Parsons S, Walkinshaw MD, Sadler PJ: Protein recognition of macrocycles: binding of anti-HIV metallocyclams to lysozyme. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2005, 102:2288-2292. This work provides a structural basis for the design of macrocycles and metallo-macrocycles that bind with high affinity to G-coupled receptors and other proteins. 27. Paisey SJ, Sadler PJ: Anti-viral cyclam macrocycles: rapid zinc uptake at physiological pH. Chem Commun (Camb) 2004:306-307. 28. Esté JA, Cabrera C, de Clercq E, Struyf S, van Damme J, Bridger G, Skerlj RT, Abrams MJ, Henson G, Gutierrez A et al.: Activity of different bicyclam derivatives against human immunodeficiency virus depends on their interaction with the CXCR4 chemokine receptor. Mol Pharmacol 1999, 55:67-73. www.sciencedirect.com