Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier

Abstract Porphyrin derivatives accumulate selectively in cancer cells and are can be used as carriers of drugs. Until now, the substituents that bind to porphyrins (mainly at the meso-position) have been actively investigated, but the effect of the functional porphyrin positions (β-, meso-position)...

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Main Authors: Koshi Nishida, Toshifumi Tojo, Takeshi Kondo, Makoto Yuasa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-01-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81725-3
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spelling doaj-4fe4737659d14ca9bbbb1a2633d6ba652021-01-24T12:28:31ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-01-0111111010.1038/s41598-021-81725-3Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrierKoshi Nishida0Toshifumi Tojo1Takeshi Kondo2Makoto Yuasa3Department of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of ScienceDepartment of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of ScienceDepartment of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of ScienceDepartment of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of ScienceAbstract Porphyrin derivatives accumulate selectively in cancer cells and are can be used as carriers of drugs. Until now, the substituents that bind to porphyrins (mainly at the meso-position) have been actively investigated, but the effect of the functional porphyrin positions (β-, meso-position) on tumor accumulation has not been investigated. Therefore, we investigated the correlation between the functional position of substituents and the accumulation of porphyrins in cancer cells using cancer cells. We found that the meso-derivative showed higher accumulation in cancer cells than the β-derivative, and porphyrins with less bulky substituent actively accumulate in cancer cells. When evaluating the intracellular distribution of porphyrin, we found that porphyrin was internalized by endocytosis and direct membrane permeation. As factors involved in these two permeation mechanisms, we evaluated the affinity between porphyrin-protein (endocytosis) and the permeability to the phospholipid bilayer membrane (direct membrane permeation). We found that the binding position of porphyrin affects the factors involved in the transmembrane permeation mechanisms and impacts the accumulation in cancer cells.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81725-3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koshi Nishida
Toshifumi Tojo
Takeshi Kondo
Makoto Yuasa
spellingShingle Koshi Nishida
Toshifumi Tojo
Takeshi Kondo
Makoto Yuasa
Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
Scientific Reports
author_facet Koshi Nishida
Toshifumi Tojo
Takeshi Kondo
Makoto Yuasa
author_sort Koshi Nishida
title Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
title_short Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
title_full Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
title_fullStr Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
title_sort evaluation of the correlation between porphyrin accumulation in cancer cells and functional positions for application as a drug carrier
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Porphyrin derivatives accumulate selectively in cancer cells and are can be used as carriers of drugs. Until now, the substituents that bind to porphyrins (mainly at the meso-position) have been actively investigated, but the effect of the functional porphyrin positions (β-, meso-position) on tumor accumulation has not been investigated. Therefore, we investigated the correlation between the functional position of substituents and the accumulation of porphyrins in cancer cells using cancer cells. We found that the meso-derivative showed higher accumulation in cancer cells than the β-derivative, and porphyrins with less bulky substituent actively accumulate in cancer cells. When evaluating the intracellular distribution of porphyrin, we found that porphyrin was internalized by endocytosis and direct membrane permeation. As factors involved in these two permeation mechanisms, we evaluated the affinity between porphyrin-protein (endocytosis) and the permeability to the phospholipid bilayer membrane (direct membrane permeation). We found that the binding position of porphyrin affects the factors involved in the transmembrane permeation mechanisms and impacts the accumulation in cancer cells.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81725-3
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AT takeshikondo evaluationofthecorrelationbetweenporphyrinaccumulationincancercellsandfunctionalpositionsforapplicationasadrugcarrier
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