Abstract

A set of polyamidoamine dendrimers were modified in such a way that they are able to act as carrier and drug delivery systems for cytostatics. The terminal binding of the non-proteinogenic D,L-2,3-diaminopropionic acid allowed the attachment of the cytotoxic PtX(2) moiety (X = Cl, I: A(PtI(2))(2), A(PtCl(2))(2), B(PtI(2))(2), B(PtCl(2))(2)), while the 2-carboxypentanedioic acid acted as leaving group for [meso-1,2-bis(4-fluorophenyl)ethylenediamine]platinum(II) ((m-4F-Pt)(3)C, (m-4F-Pt)(3)D). Poly(ethylene glycol) chains at C(PtI(2))(3) and C(PtCl(2))(3) as well as (m-4F-Pt)(3)C and (m-4F-Pt)(3)D mediated sufficient water solubility. Additional dansyl residues (B(PtI(2))(2) and (m-4F-Pt)(3)D) made a simultaneous determination of platinum (graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GF-AAS)) and dendrimer (fluorimetry) possible. The ethylenediamine-terminated dendrimers were typically accumulated into MCF-7 cells in clathrin-dependent pathways and targeted the platinum moieties to the nuclear compartment. The highest intracellular platinum concentration and DNA binding caused the dendrimers A(PtX(2))(2) and B(PtX(2))(2). A coordinative DNA binding, however, is very unlikely because of low cytotoxic effects. (m-4F-Pt)(3)C and (m-4F-Pt)(3)D are labile conjugates and liberated the m-4F-Pt moiety in biological systems. The effects of these dendrimers were similar to that of the reference compounds m-4F-PtCl(2) and m-4F-Pt(H(2)O)(2).

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