Abstract

Recently, ω-3 fatty acids have been revealed to having cancer cell growth suppressibility. It is necessary to analyze the mechanism of cancer cell growth suppressibility and to impart selective cancer cell accumulation when creating anticancer drugs based on ω-3 fatty acids. Therefore, it is necessarily essential to introduce a luminescent molecule or a molecule which have a drug delivery function into ω-3 fatty acids, and the position of introduction is the ω-3 fatty acids’ carboxyl group. On the other hand, whether the ω-3 fatty acids’ cancer cell growth suppressibility is maintained when the ω-3 fatty acids’ carboxyl groups are converted to other structures, such as ester groups, is unclear. In this work, a derivative was synthesized wherein the α-linolenic acid carboxyl group, one of the ω-3 fatty acids, was converted to an ester group and evaluated the cancer cell growth suppressibility, as well as the amount of cancer cell uptake. As a result, it was suggested that the ester group derivatives presented the same functionality as α-linolenic acid, and the ω-3 fatty acid carboxyl group is a flexible functional group, which can be structurally modified in terms of functionality to cancer cells.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call