Abstract

Titanocene dichloride [Ti(η 5-C 5H 5) 2Cl 2] ( 1), has been grafted onto dehydrated hydroxyapatite (HAP), Al 2O 3 and two mesoporous silicas MSU-2 (Michigan State University Silica type 2) and HMS (Hexagonal Mesoporous Silica), to give the novel materials HAP/[Ti(η 5-C 5H 5) 2Cl 2] ( S1) (1.01 wt.% Ti), Al 2O 3/[Ti(η 5-C 5H 5) 2Cl 2] ( S2) (2.36 wt.% Ti), HMS/[Ti(η 5-C 5H 5) 2Cl 2] ( S3) (0.75 wt.% Ti) and MSU-2/[Ti(η 5-C 5H 5) 2Cl 2] ( S4) (0.74 wt.% Ti), which have been characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence, nitrogen gas sorption, multinuclear magic angle spinning NMR spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy, thermogravimetry analysis, UV spectroscopy, scanning electronic microscopy and transmission electronic microscopy. The cytotoxicity of the titanocene-functionalized materials toward human cancer cell lines from five different histogenic origins: 8505 C (anaplastic thyroid cancer), A253 (head and neck cancer), A549 (lung carcinoma), A2780 (ovarian cancer) and DLD-1 (colon cancer) has been determined. M 50 values (quantity of material needed to inhibit normal cell growth by 50%) and Ti-M 50 values (quantity of anchored titanium needed to inhibit normal cell growth by 50%) indicate that the activity of S1– S4 against studied human cancer cells depended on the surface type as well as on the cell line. In addition, studies on the titanocene release and the interaction of the materials S1– S4 with DNA show that the cytotoxic activity may be due to particle action, because no release of titanium complexes has been observed in physiological conditions, while electrostatic interactions of titanocene-functionalized particles with DNA have been observed.

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