Abstract
Cyclometalated gold(III) complexes have been reported to template C-S cross-coupling reactions in a biological environment and acting as modifiers of cysteine residues. To broaden the scope of organogold complexes for covalent protein post-translational modification in cancer cells, an oxime-containing C^N-cyclometalated gold(III) compound was synthesised featuring a carboxylic acid group for either immobilisation on amine-bearing solid support (Au), or functionalisation with a fluorescent tag (Au-Fluo). Live-cell imaging revealed that Au-Fluo distributed evenly into SW480 colon carcinoma cells, with a slight preference for the nuclear and nucleolar compartments. Thioredoxin reductase 1 (TXNRD1) was observed as the major interactor of Au from SW480 cell lysates in chemoproteomic approaches and a 2 : 1 binding stoichiometry resulted from titration-dependent pull-downs. Direct interactions confirmed a high reactivity of Au towards the catalytic CysSec-dyad at the C-terminus of TXNRD1 and revealed double arylation events at this motif. Therefore, the observed Au-templated arylation of selenocysteine likely contributes to the compound’s biological effects. Proteome profiling of SW480 cancer cells treated with sub-cytotoxic concentrations of Au revealed an apparent reduction of the available selenium pool by down-regulating the detected selenoproteins, except TXNRD1. Additionally, Au treatment induced the NRF2-KEAP1 stress response, pointing towards a disturbance of the intracellular redox balance by Au-mediated covalent targeting of TXNRD1. Inhibition of heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1), the most strongly induced NRF2-target, showed pronounced synergism with Au treatment. Overall, organogold compounds, templating the formation of C–S(Se) bonds in cells as a novel mode of action, hold promise for the targeted modification of (onco)proteins.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
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Supporting information contains synthesis and characterisation, experimental details, supplementary figures and supplementary tables.
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