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Dive into the research topics where Christian G. Hartinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian G. Hartinger.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2009

Bioorganometallic chemistry—from teaching paradigms to medicinal applications

Christian G. Hartinger; Paul J. Dyson

In undergraduate level organometallic chemistry courses students are usually taught that organometallic compounds are toxic and unstable in air and water. While this is true of many complexes, some are also non-toxic and stable in air and water. Indeed, bioorganometallic chemistry, the study of biomolecules or biologically active molecules that contain at least one carbon directly bound to a metal, is a thriving subject, and air and water stability is a general pre-requisite. This interdisciplinary field is located at the borderline between chemistry, biochemistry, biology and medicine. In this tutorial review, various aspects of bioorganometallic chemistry are introduced, with the main emphasis on medicinal organometallic compounds. Organometallic therapeutics for cancer, HIV and malaria and other medicinal applications are described. It is also shown how rational ligand design has led to new improved therapies much in the same way that an organometallic chemist working in catalysis will design new ligands for improved activities.


Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2008

KP1019, A New Redox‐Active Anticancer Agent – Preclinical Development and Results of a Clinical Phase I Study in Tumor Patients

Christian G. Hartinger; Michael A. Jakupec; Stefanie Zorbas-Seifried; Michael Groessl; Alexander E. Egger; Walter Berger; Haralabos Zorbas; Paul J. Dyson; Bernhard K. Keppler

The promising drug candidate indazolium trans‐[tetrachlorobis(1H‐indazole)ruthenate(III)] (KP1019) is the second Ru‐based anticancer agent to enter clinical trials. In this review, which is an update of a paper from 2006 (Hartinger et al., J. Inorg. Biochem. 2006, 100, 891–904), the experimental evidence for the proposed mode of action of this coordination compound is discussed, including transport into the cell via the transferrin cycle and activation by reduction. The results of the early clinical development of KP1019 are summarized in which five out of six evaluated patients experienced disease stabilization with no severe side effects.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Emerging Protein Targets for Anticancer Metallodrugs: Inhibition of Thioredoxin Reductase and Cathepsin B by Antitumor Ruthenium(II)−Arene Compounds

Angela Casini; Chiara Gabbiani; Francesca Sorrentino; Maria Pia Rigobello; Alberto Bindoli; Tifimann J. Geldbach; Alessandro Marrone; Nazzareno Re; Christian G. Hartinger; Paul J. Dyson; Luigi Messori

A series of ruthenium(II)-arene (RAPTA) compounds were evaluated for their ability to inhibit thioredoxin reductase (either cytosolic or mitochondrial) and cathepsin B, two possible targets for anticancer metallodrugs. In general, inhibition of the thioredoxin reductases was lower than that of cathepsin B, although selected compounds were excellent inhibitors of both classes of enzymes in comparison to other metal-based drugs. Some initial structure-activity relationships could be established. On the basis of the obtained data, different mechanisms of binding/inhibition appear to be operative; remarkably the selectivity of the ruthenium compounds toward solid metastatic tumors also correlates to the observed trends. Notably, docking studies of the interactions of representative RAPTA compounds with cathepsin B were performed that provided realistic structures for the resulting protein-metallodrug adducts. Good agreement was generally found between the inhibiting potency of the RAPTA compounds and the computed stability of the corresponding cat B/RAPTA adducts.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

The ruthenium(II)–arene compound RAPTA-C induces apoptosis in EAC cells through mitochondrial and p53–JNK pathways

Soumya Chatterjee; Subhadip Kundu; Arindam Bhattacharyya; Christian G. Hartinger; Paul J. Dyson

An investigation of the molecular mechanism of the anticancer activity demonstrated by the ruthenium(II)–arene compound [Ru(η6-p-cymene)Cl2(pta)] (pta is 1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane), termed “RAPTA-C”, in Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC) bearing mice is described. RAPTA-C exhibits effective cell growth inhibition by triggering G2/M phase arrest and apoptosis in cancer cells. Cell cycle arrest is associated with increased levels of p21 and reduced amounts of cyclin E. RAPTA-C treatment also enhances the levels of p53, and its treatment triggers the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway, as shown by the change in Bax to Bcl-2 ratios, resulting in cytochrome c release and caspase-9 activation. c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) is a critical mediator in RAPTA-C-induced cell growth inhibition. Activation of JNK by RAPTA-C increases significantly during apoptosis. Overall, these results suggest a critical role for JNK and p53 in RAPTA-C-induced G2/M arrest and apoptosis of EAC-bearing mice. Consequently, RAPTA-C treatment results in a significant inhibition in the progression of cancer in an animal model, which emulates the human disease, and does so with remarkably low general toxicity; hence, RAPTA-C has potential for clinical application.


Drug Resistance Updates | 2008

Resistance against novel anticancer metal compounds: Differences and similarities

Petra Heffeter; Ute Jungwirth; Michael A. Jakupec; Christian G. Hartinger; Markus Galanski; Leonilla Elbling; Michael Micksche; Bernhard K. Keppler; Walter Berger

The platinum antitumor drugs cisplatin, carboplatin and oxaliplatin are widely used components of modern cancer chemotherapy. However, their success is limited by severe adverse effects and because of the impact of intrinsic and acquired resistance mechanisms on tumor responses. Consequently, intense efforts have been made to develop new metal compounds that either display enhanced tumor specificity or are less prone to the development of resistance. Despite the synthesis of thousands of compounds during the last decades only very few novel metal drugs have successfully reached clinical development and/or approval so far. In this review we summarize the current knowledge on drug resistance mechanisms against novel metal compounds (including platinum, arsenic, ruthenium, gallium, titanium, copper, and lanthanum drugs), and address the question whether there might exist a general metal-drug resistance phenotype.


Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry | 2004

Transferrin binding and transferrin-mediated cellular uptake of the ruthenium coordination compound KP1019, studied by means of AAS, ESI-MS and CD spectroscopy

Martina Pongratz; Petra Schluga; Michael A. Jakupec; Vladimir B. Arion; Christian G. Hartinger; Günter Allmaier; Bernhard K. Keppler

Indazolium trans-[tetrachlorobis(1H-indazole)ruthenate(III)] (KP1019) shows particular promise as an antitumour agent against colorectal cancer. It is known that KP1019 reacts with human serum proteins, whereby the major amount binds to albumin (present in large excess) and a smaller amount to transferrin. It has been hypothesised that transferrin-mediated uptake by transferrin receptor expressing tumour cells may in part explain the apparent tumour selectivity of this compound. Circular dichroism spectroscopy and electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry studies demonstrate that two equivalents of KP1019 bind specifically to human apotransferrin, while additional amounts of the ruthenium complex bind unspecifically. Uptake studies in the transferrin receptor-expressing human colon carcinoma cell line SW480 revealed a higher cellular accumulation of KP1019 in comparison to a KP1019-transferrin adduct (2∶1), while the uptake of a KP1019–Fe(III)-transferrin conjugate (1∶0.3∶1) significantly exceeded that of KP1019, suggesting that iron binding is necessary to obtain a protein conformation which favours recognition by the transferrin receptors on the cell surface. Our study showed that KP1019 is transported into the cell by both transferrin-independent and transferrin-dependent mechanisms. Transferrin-mediated uptake is more efficient when transferrin is saturated with iron to a physiological degree (∼30%). Cell fractionation experiments demonstrated that after a 2 h treatment of human colon cancer cells with 10 µM KP1019 on average 55% of the intracellular ruthenium is located in the cellular nucleus, while 45% remain in the cytosol and other cellular components.


Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2009

Pharmacokinetics of a novel anticancer ruthenium complex (KP1019, FFC14A) in a phase I dose-escalation study.

Frederike Lentz; Anne Drescher; Andreas Lindauer; Magdalena Henke; Ralf A. Hilger; Christian G. Hartinger; Max E. Scheulen; Christian Dittrich; Bernhard K. Keppler; Ulrich Jaehde

A phase I and pharmacokinetic study was carried out with the new ruthenium complex indazolium trans-[tetrachlorobis(1H-indazole)ruthenate(III)] (KP1019, FFC14A). Seven patients with various types of solid tumours refractory to standard therapy were treated with escalating doses of KP1019 (25–600 mg) twice weekly for 3 weeks. No dose-limiting toxicity occurred. Ruthenium plasma concentration–time profiles after the first dose and under multiple-dose conditions were analysed using a compartmental approach. The pharmacokinetic disposition was characterised by a small volume of distribution, low clearance and long half-life. Only a small fraction of ruthenium was excreted renally. The area under the curve values increased proportionally with dose indicating linear pharmacokinetics.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Transferring the concept of multinuclearity to ruthenium complexes for improvement of anticancer activity.

Maria G. Mendoza-Ferri; Christian G. Hartinger; Marco A. Mendoza; Michael Groessl; Alexander E. Egger; Rene Eichinger; John B. Mangrum; Nicholas Farrell; Magdalena Maruszak; Patrick J. Bednarski; Franz Klein; Michael A. Jakupec; Alexey A. Nazarov; Kay Severin; Bernhard K. Keppler

Multinuclear platinum anticancer complexes are a proven option to overcome resistance of established anticancer compounds. Transferring this concept to ruthenium complexes led to the synthesis of dinuclear Ru(II)-arene compounds containing a bis(pyridinone)alkane ligand linker. A pronounced influence of the spacer length on the in vitro anticancer activity was found, which is correlated to the lipophilicity of the complexes. IC(50) values in the same dimension as for established platinum drugs were found in human tumor cell lines. No cross-resistance to oxoplatin, a cisplatin prodrug, was observed for the most active complex in three resistant cell lines; in fact, a 10-fold reversal of sensitivity in two of the oxoplatin-resistant lines was found. (Bio)analytical characterization of the representative examples showed that the ruthenium complexes hydrolyze rapidly, forming predominantly diaqua species that exhibit affinity toward transferrin and DNA, indicating that both proteins and nucleobases are potential targets.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

A Ruthenium Antimetastasis Agent Forms Specific Histone Protein Adducts in the Nucleosome Core

Bin Wu; Michelle S. Ong; Michael Groessl; Zenita Adhireksan; Christian G. Hartinger; Paul J. Dyson; Curt A. Davey

Keywords: bioinorganic chemistry ; cancer ; histone binding ; nucleosomes ; Rapta-C ; ruthenium ; Mass-Spectrometry ; Anticancer Metallodrugs ; Complexes ; Chromatin ; Binding ; Dna ; Particle ; Chemotherapy ; Selectivity ; Inhibition Reference EPFL-ARTICLE-171621doi:10.1002/chem.201100298View record in Web of Science Record created on 2011-12-16, modified on 2017-05-12


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Carbohydrate-Metal Complexes and their Potential as Anticancer Agents

Christian G. Hartinger; Alexey A. Nazarov; Shaheen M. Ashraf; Paul J. Dyson; Bernhard K. Keppler

Platinum complex-based chemotherapy is one of the major treatment options of many malignancies. Although severe side effects occur, and only a limited spectrum of tumors can be cured, Pt compounds are used in every second therapy scheme. Thus, many different drug design strategies have been employed for improving the properties of anticancer drugs including pH or redox activation in the tumor, variation of the metal center and therefore the redox and ligand exchange properties, the application of multinuclear metal complexes, the development of targeted approaches, etc. Application of carbohydrate-metal complexes is an example of a targeted approach exploiting the biochemical and metabolic functions of diverse sugars in living organisms for transport and accumulation. Natural carbohydrates and synthetic derivatives possess a manifold of donors endowing them with the ability to coordinate metal centers and providing some additional advantages over other ligands, e.g., biocompatibility, non-toxicity, enantiomeric purity, water solubility, and well-explored chemistry. In recent years, several examples of carbohydrate compounds have been developed for diverse medicinal applications ranging from compounds with antibiotic, antiviral, or fungicidal activity and anticancer compounds. Herein, metal complexes with carbohydrate ligands are reviewed and the role of the carbohydrate carriers on the antineoplastic activity of these compounds, both in vitro and in vivo, is described.

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Paul J. Dyson

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Alexey A. Nazarov

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Michael Groessl

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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