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The permeability and cytotoxicity of insulin-mimetic vanadium (III,IV,V)-dipicolinate complexes
Authors:Zhang Yue  Yang Xiao-Da  Wang Kui  Crans Debbie C
Affiliation:National Laboratory of Natural and Biomimetic Drugs, Department of Chemical Biology, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Peking University Health Science Center, XueyuanRoad 38, HaiDian District, Beijing 100083, PR China.
Abstract:Vanadium (III,IV,V)-dipicolinate complexes with different redox properties were selected to investigate the structure-property relationship of insulin-mimetic vanadium complexes for membrane permeability and gastrointestinal (GI) stress-related toxicity using the Caco-2 cell monolayer model. The cytotoxicity of the vanadium complexes was assayed with 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazoyl-2-yl) 2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assays and the effect on monolayer integrity was measured by the trans-epithelial electric resistance (TEER). The three vanadium complexes exhibited intermediate membrane permeability (P(app) = 1.4-3.6x10(-6) cm/s) with low cellular accumulation level (<1%). The permeability of all compounds was independent of the concentration of vanadium complexes and excess picolinate ligands. Both V(III) and V(V)-dipicolinate complexes induced 3-4-fold greater reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) production than the V(IV)-dipicolinate complex; while the vanadium (III)-dipicolinate was 3-fold less damaging to tight junction of the Caco-2 cell monolayer. Despite the differences in apparent permeability, cellular accumulation, and capacity to induce reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) levels, the three vanadium complexes exhibited similar cytotoxicity (IC50 = 1.7-1.9 mM). An ion pair reagent, tetrabutylammonium, increased the membrane apparent permeability by 4-fold for vanadium (III and IV)-dipicolinate complexes and 16-fold for vanadium (V)-dipicolinate as measured by decrease in TEER values. In addition, the ion pair reagent prevented damage to monolayer integrity. The three vanadium (III,IV,V)-dipicolinate complexes may pass through caco-2 monolayer via a passive diffusion mechanism. Our results suggest that formation of ion pairs may influence compound permeation and significantly reduce the required dose, and hence the GI toxicity of vanadium-dipicolinate complexes.
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