Potent hemithioindigo-based antimitotics photocontrol the microtubule cytoskeleton in cellulo

Hemithioindigo is a promising molecular photoswitch that has only recently been applied as a photoswitchable pharmacophore for control over bioactivity in cellulo. Uniquely, in contrast to other photoswitches that have been applied to biology, the pseudosymmetric hemithioindigo scaffold has allowed...

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Published inBeilstein journal of organic chemistry Vol. 16; no. 1; pp. 125 - 134
Main Authors Sailer, Alexander, Ermer, Franziska, Kraus, Yvonne, Bingham, Rebekkah, Lutter, Ferdinand H, Ahlfeld, Julia, Thorn-Seshold, Oliver
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Beilstein-Institut zur Föerderung der Chemischen Wissenschaften 27.01.2020
Beilstein-Institut
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Summary:Hemithioindigo is a promising molecular photoswitch that has only recently been applied as a photoswitchable pharmacophore for control over bioactivity in cellulo. Uniquely, in contrast to other photoswitches that have been applied to biology, the pseudosymmetric hemithioindigo scaffold has allowed the creation of both dark-active and lit-active photopharmaceuticals for the same binding site by a priori design. However, the potency of previous hemithioindigo photopharmaceuticals has not been optimal for their translation to other biological models. Inspired by the structure of tubulin-inhibiting indanones, we created hemithioindigo-based indanone-like tubulin inhibitors ( ) and optimised their cellular potency as antimitotic photopharmaceuticals. These feature reliable and robust visible-light photoswitching and high fatigue resistance. The use of the hemithioindigo scaffold also permitted us to employ a -hydroxyhemistilbene motif, a structural feature which is denied to most azobenzenes due to the negligibly short lifetimes of their metastable -isomers, which proved crucial to enhancing the potency and photoswitchability. The were ten times more potent than previously reported hemithioindigo photopharmaceutical antimitotics in a series of cell-free and cellular assays, and allowed robust photocontrol over tubulin polymerisation, microtubule (MT) network structure, cell cycle, and cell survival. represent a powerful addition to the growing toolbox of photopharmaceutical reagents for MT cytoskeleton research. Additionally, as the hemithioindigo scaffold allows photoswitchable bioactivity for substituent patterns inaccessible to the majority of current photopharmaceuticals, wider adoption of the hemithioindigo scaffold may significantly expand the scope of cellular and in vivo targets addressable by photopharmacology.
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ISSN:1860-5397
2195-951X
1860-5397
DOI:10.3762/bjoc.16.14