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      Custom-Fit Ruthenium(II) Metallopeptides: A New Twist to DNA Binding With Coordination Compounds

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          New trends for metal complexes with anticancer activity.

          Medicinal inorganic chemistry can exploit the unique properties of metal ions for the design of new drugs. This has, for instance, led to the clinical application of chemotherapeutic agents for cancer treatment, such as cisplatin. The use of cisplatin is, however, severely limited by its toxic side-effects. This has spurred chemists to employ different strategies in the development of new metal-based anticancer agents with different mechanisms of action. Recent trends in the field are discussed in this review. These include the more selective delivery and/or activation of cisplatin-related prodrugs and the discovery of new non-covalent interactions with the classical target, DNA. The use of the metal as scaffold rather than reactive centre and the departure from the cisplatin paradigm of activity towards a more targeted, cancer cell-specific approach, a major trend, are discussed as well. All this, together with the observation that some of the new drugs are organometallic complexes, illustrates that exciting times lie ahead for those interested in 'metals in medicine'.
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            Application of metal coordination chemistry to explore and manipulate cell biology.

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              NMR spectroscopy techniques for screening and identifying ligand binding to protein receptors.

              Binding events of ligands to receptors are the key for an understanding of biological processes. Gaining insight into protein-protein and protein-ligand interactions in solution has recently become possible on an atomic level by new NMR spectroscopic techniques. These experiments identify binding events either by looking at the resonance signals of the ligand or the protein. Ideally, both techniques together deliver a complete picture of ligand binding to a receptor. The approaches discussed in this review allow screening of compound libraries as well as a detailed identification of the groups involved in the binding events. Also, characterization of the binding strength and kinetics is possible, competitive binding as well as allosteric effects can be identified, and it has even been possible to identify ligand binding to intact viruses and membrane-bound proteins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chemistry - A European Journal
                Chem. Eur. J.
                Wiley
                09476539
                September 27 2013
                September 27 2013
                August 13 2013
                : 19
                : 40
                : 13369-13375
                Article
                10.1002/chem.201301629
                5b4e9af0-407c-48ba-b208-96f51a07083f
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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