Chemists at St Petersburg University discover a compound with a laser-induced ‘switching’ of biological activity

Scientists at St Petersburg University together with researchers from St. Petersburg Federal Research Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SPC RAS) and the Scientific Research Centre for Ecological Safety of the Russian Academy of Sciences have developed a new organic compound demonstrating a laser-induced enhancement in its biological activity.

The discovered phosphonate will enable scientists to affect human body cells with increased precision and safety. The research findings are published in the New J. Chem., 2021, 45, 15195-15199 issued by the Royal Society of Chemistry.

The controlled effect of agents on the human body is closely examined in photopharmacology – an area in pharmaceutical science studying agents that change their activity when exposed to light. The chemists at St Petersburg University have developed a new phosphonate that can ‘switch’ on demand under exposure to light increasing its biological activity when, for example, the agent reaches the inflamed area.

As a rule, photopharmacological agents consist of two components – drugs and a photoactive switch. However, the scientists have discovered a compound that can perform both functions simultaneously – phosphorylated arylaminomalonates. Under exposure to laser, a part of the molecule (phosphonate group) literally turns. This changes the form and composition of the whole molecule in space enhancing its biological properties.

The resulting substance can be applied in ophthalmology, neurodegenerative disease (for example, Alzheimer disease) and other medical spheres. This is because synthesised phosphonate is an inhibitor of cholinesterase – an important ferment of the nervous and other systems of a human body. Already today some publications explain how cholinesterase levelling takes part in the treatment of skin disorders. A drug can be applied to the skin and exposed to light that will ‘switch it on’ or ‘switch it off’.

Previously, the research team of the scientists from St Petersburg University, St. Petersburg Federal Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SPC RAS) and the Scientific Research Centre for Ecological Safety of the Russian Academy of Sciences developed an agent that decreases its biological activity under exposure to light. A new phosphonate has a reverse effect. A directed laser beam with a wavelength of 266 or 325 nanometres changes the absorption spectrum and enhances the agent biological activity.

Alina Manshina is the author of the study, Doctor of Chemistry, Professor in the Department of Laser Chemistry and Laser Materials Science. She said that although the developed agents refer to one group, they react to light exposure in a different way: one of them ‘switches on’, while the other ‘switches off’. In future, scientists might be able to use these compounds simultaneously and control the option of ‘switching on and off’. However, this requires additional research.

“Our main achievement is that we have discovered this reaction of phosphonates to light emission. Changes in phosphonate properties under exposure to a light beam have not been studied before. It is important that the developed agents do not just react to light, but change their form under exposure to laser significantly modifying their biological activity. This property has been found virtually by accident, which often happens in scientific research. However, we have managed to test it experimentally and describe,” Alina Manshina commented on the research.

Moreover, the scientists have noticed that the biological properties of phosphonates are also affected by substitute agents within the compound. The resulting substance structure has the so-called phenyl ring capable of taking various elements including fluorine, bromine, chlorine, hydrogen or methyl group СН3. Thus, one and the same agent – phosphonate – will ultimately acquire various biological properties, since molecules with different substitutes react to laser emission in a different way.

Some substances enhance their biological activity only slightly, while others – up to 90-95%. This is a significant increase indicating the impact of the substitute agent within the molecular structure. Thus, biological activity increases upon exposure in the PhAM-F> PhAM-Cl> PhAM-Br series. The largest increase in the inhibiting property is observed in a fluorine substituted phosphonate (by 6.5 times).

“Potentially, it can be applied in developing personalised medical solutions that take into account individual characteristics of the person choosing optimal dose and exposure,” clarified Alina Manshina.

In future, the researchers want to examine in more detail how the developed chemical agents affect the human body and if they are capable of damaging tissue cells. A cytotoxicity examination will allow for a more detailed understanding of the application areas and start clinical trials followed by real-life practice.

‘We clearly understand that the way from an agent synthesised in a test tube and test results to the production and launch of a specific drug is very long. However, we are interested in finding the key element that determines if the agent reacts to light exposure or if this phosphonate is non-sensitive to the laser. Our new research will be focused on finding answers to these questions,’ said Alina Manshina.

Experimental research of light exposure impact on the phosphonate biological properties was performed in the Centre for Optical and Laser Materials Research of the Research Park at St Petersburg University.

The work on the part of the St. Petersburg Federal Research Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences was performed under the federal order of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation for 2019-2021 (No АААА-А19-119020190099-1) with the support of the Centre for scientific excellence ‘Photonics Centre’ funded by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (Contract No 075-15-2020-906).

Russian and Italian scientists discover new substance that can kill cancer cells

Specialists of the Center of Medical Chemistry of Togliatti State University in collaboration with colleagues from Saint Petersburg State University and University of Florence (Università degli Studi di Firenze) have found a new pro-apoptotic agent – a substance capable to suppress the growth of malignant tumours.

In March of this year, the specialists of  TSU, SPbSU and UoF conducted a joint research study that resulted in new chemical substances from the group of sulfonamides that inhibit the activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA).

Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) – is an important class of enzymes in the human body that are responsible for the regulation of various physiological processes, ensuring the constancy of the internal environment of the cell in terms of CO2 level and pH –balance. A cancer cell, unlike a normal one, has various mechanisms for survival, one of them being an increased expression of carbonic anhydrase.

In an unfavourable environment, a cancer cell begins to intensively express (synthesize) carbonic anhydrase on its surface, which “acidifies” everything around, killing healthy
cells and creating conditions for tumour growth.

In search of new carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, scientists from two countries received an unexpected result.

” This time we tried a new class of inhibitors, which should have had a slightly different
mechanism of carbonic anhydrase inactivation. Unfortunately, our substances did not work according to this mechanism, but it turned out that one of the compounds had an activity that did not correlate with the activity of carbonic anhydrase. This is how we discovered a new pro-apoptotic agent – ” Alexandr Bunev, director of the Center for Medical Chemistry, said.

Apoptosis is one of the most conservative mechanisms of cell death, which is necessary for maintaining cellular homeostasis*. In a normal cell, it is triggered in the case of some disorders or damage, while the cancer cell does everything to suppress apoptosis.

” A cancer cell does not need apoptosis, on the contrary, it acquires some resistance to this
process due to incorrect mutations and divisions. From this point of view, apoptosis inducers – chemicals that can affect also tumour cells and induce (cause) apoptosis in them – represent a fundamentally interesting mechanism of action in modern antitumor, including targeted drugs, ” Alexander Bunev explains.

Scientists conducted a series of tests to confirm that under the influence of the new compound, cancer cells entered deep apoptosis. Studies have also allowed experts to assume that the resulting substance is able to intercalate (penetrate) into Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).

This gives a certain failure in the division, and the cell is forced to go into apoptosis, even if it has some algorithms for bypassing it, –Alexander Bunev says.

The results of the scientists’ joint work from Togliatti, St. Petersburg and Florence are published in the European Journal of Medical Chemistry (Q1), which provides coverage to
the original research works in the main fields of medicinal chemistry.