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N-acyloxymethyl-phthalimides deliver genotoxic formaldehyde to human cells

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-10, 08:34 authored by Vicki L Emms, Liam Anthony Lewis, Lilla Beja, Natasha FA Bulman, Elisabete Pires, Frederick Muskett, James Mccullagh, Lonnie P Swift, Peter J McHugh, Richard J Hopkinson

 

Formaldehyde is a pollutant and human metabolite that is toxic at high concentrations. Biological studies on formaldehyde are hindered by its high reactivity and volatility, which make it challenging to deliver quantitatively to cells. Here, we describe the development and validation of a set of N-acyloxymethyl-phthalimides as cell-relevant formaldehyde delivery agents. These esterase-sensitive compounds were similarly or less inhibitory to human cancer cell growth than free formaldehyde but the lead compound increased intracellular formaldehyde concentrations, increased cellular levels of thymidine derivatives (implying increased formaldehyde-mediated carbon metabolism), induced formation of cellular DNA-protein cross-links and induced cell death in pancreatic cancer cells. Overall, our N-acyloxymethyl-phthalimides and control compounds provide an accessible and broadly applicable chemical toolkit for formaldehyde biological research and have potential as cancer therapeutics.

Funding

Profiling the effect of the metabolite formaldehyde during gemcitabine chemotherapy

Wellcome Trust

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A Chemical Toolkit to Define Formaldehyde’s Enigmatic Biology

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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Cancer Research UK Programme Award (CRUK/A2475

History

Author affiliation

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Chemical Science

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

issn

2041-6520

eissn

2041-6539

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-10-10

Language

en

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