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    Influence of Equatorial and Axial Carboxylato Ligands on the Kinetic Inertness of Platinum(IV) Complexes in the Presence of Ascorbate and Cysteine and within DLD‑1 Cancer Cells

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    The rapid and premature reduction of platinum­(IV) complexes in vivo is a significant impediment to these complexes being successfully employed as anticancer prodrugs. This study investigates the influence of the platinum­(IV) coordination sphere on the ease of reduction of the platinum center in various biological contexts. In the presence of the biological reductants, ascorbate and cysteine, platinum­(IV) complexes with dicarboxylato equatorial ligands were observed to exhibit lower reduction potentials and slower reduction rates than analogous platinum­(IV) complexes with dichlorido equatorial ligands. Diaminetetracarboxylatoplatinum­(IV) complexes exhibited unusually long half-lives in the presence of excess reductants; however, the complexes exhibited moderate potency in vitro, indicative of rapid reduction within the intracellular environment. By use of XANES spectroscopy, <i>trans</i>-[Pt­(OAc)<sub>2</sub>(ox)­(en)] and <i>trans</i>-[PtCl<sub>2</sub>­(OAc)<sub>2</sub>(en)] were observed to be reduced at a similar rate within DLD-1 cancer cells. This large variability in kinetic inertness of diamine­tetracarboxylato­platinum­(IV) complexes in different biological contexts has significant implications for the design of platinum­(IV) prodrugs
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