Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.3.44 (P-glycoprotein)
13,344 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Modulation of the expression of P-glycoprotein, a plasma membrane protein associated with multidrug resistance, was examined in drug-sensitive and drug-resistant tumor cells treated with leukoregulin, a M(r) 50,000 cytokine from human lymphocytes that rapidly permeabilizes the plasma membrane of many tumor cells facilitating the uptake of doxorubicin and other tumor-inhibitory antibiotics. P-glycoprotein expression was measured flow cytometrically by the binding of C219 or MRK16 monoclonal antibody to multidrug-sensitive human K562 erythroleukemia and 8226/S myeloma cells, compared to multidrug-resistant 8226/DOX40 myeloma cells. Cells were treated for up to 2 h with up to 80 units of leukoregulin/ml or one of a variety of unrelated cytokines including interleukin 1 alpha (IL-1 alpha), IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, colony-stimulating factor, macrophage colony-stimulating factor, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, tumor necrosis factor alpha, gamma-interferon, alpha-interferon, epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor AA, platelet-derived growth factor BB, insulin-like growth factor I, insulin-like growth factor II, fibroblast growth factor, or transforming growth factor beta. Leukoregulin caused a concentration-dependent decrease in P-glycoprotein expression; however, P-glycoprotein expression was unaffected by the other cytokines (< 12% decrease in expression). Leukoregulin-induced membrane permeabilization, determined flow cytometrically by intracellular fluorescein efflux, and decreased P-glycoprotein expression occurred simultaneously within 15 min in drug-sensitive and -resistant cells. Enhanced doxorubicin uptake, measured flow cytometrically by doxorubicin influx, was also present within 15 min. Leukoregulin enhancement of doxorubicin uptake and increased membrane permeability varied directly with the decrease in P-glycoprotein expression. Leukoregulin in combination with doxorubicin enhanced the inhibition of cell proliferation in 8226/DOX40 multidrug-resistant cells over expressing P-glycoprotein. In contrast, combined treatment of HL-60/MX2 multidrug-resistant human promyelocytic leukemia cells that do not overexpress P-glycoprotein in association with their multidrug resistance resulted in no greater growth inhibition than observed with HL-60/MX2 cells treated with doxorubicin alone. This is the first demonstration that a naturally occurring macromolecule with anticancer activities can modulate the expression of P-glycoprotein concomitant with enhanced drug uptake and inhibition of cell proliferation.
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PMID:Decreased P-glycoprotein expression in multidrug-sensitive and -resistant human myeloma cells induced by the cytokine leukoregulin. 135 22

A multidrug-resistant variant of the human HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cell line (HL-60/MX2) has been isolated in vitro by subculturing these cells in progressively increasing concentrations of mitoxantrone. The MX2 cells are cross-resistant to etoposide, teniposide, bisantrene, dactinomycin, 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide, and the anthracyclines daunorubicin and doxorubicin but retain sensitivity to the Vinca alkaloids melphalan and mitomycin C. In addition, the MX2 cells display slight collateral sensitivity to bleomycin. Despite being 30-35-fold less sensitive to mitoxantrone, net [14C]mitoxantrone accumulation at 60 min was reduced by only 10% in the mitoxantrone-resistant cells compared to the parental line. Furthermore, at later time points, e.g., 120 and 180 min, mitoxantrone accumulation in the MX2 cells exceeded that in HL-60 cells by 8.5 and 6.4%, respectively. No significant differences were observed between the sensitive and resistant cell lines in the initial (first 60 s) accumulation of mitoxantrone, and only minor (3-6%) enhancement of mitoxantrone efflux was detected in the resistant cell type. Monoclonal antibodies to P-glycoprotein had no detectable reactivity with membrane vesicles from either the sensitive or resistant cell types as determined by standard immunoblotting techniques. The mitoxantrone-resistant cells displayed a reciprocal translocation [rcpt(1;3)-(q21;p23)] not found in the sensitive parent, but there were no demonstrable double minute chromosomes or homogeneous staining regions in cells from either line. Thus, these mitoxantrone-resistant human leukemia cells display many features which are atypical for the "classic" multidrug resistance phenotype and should provide a useful model for the study of multidrug resistance which is not mediated by P-glycoprotein.
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PMID:Multidrug resistance in mitoxantrone-selected HL-60 leukemia cells in the absence of P-glycoprotein overexpression. 256 72

Expression of P-glycoprotein (Pgp), the product of the multidrug resistance (MDR1) gene, detected by flow cytometric analysis of the binding of antibody 4E3.16, was found on significantly fewer leukemic cells in 35 adult patients with de novo acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) (mean 14.8%, median 7%) than in 184 patients with non-APL acute myeloid leukemia (AML) at diagnosis (mean 28.3%, median 18%) (p = 0.0038). APL was diagnosed based on morphology, the detection of t(15;17) and of the chimeric fusion transcript PML/RAR alpha by PCR. To further substantiate low MDR1 expression in APL, we studied cells from 11 APL patients at the molecular and functional level in comparison to 48 non-APL cases. The diagnosis of APL was associated with the absence of Pgp function by the rhodamine efflux assay (p = 0.0001). Furthermore, MDR1-specific transcript levels, determined by quantitative PCR with two distinct sets of primers, were significantly lower in mononuclear cells from the APL than the other AML cases (p = 0.013). The frequency of leukemic cells positive for CD34, an antigen presumably associated with Pgp expression in AML, was significantly lower in APL than other AMLs (p = 0.0001). In contrast to non-APL leukemias, those few cases of CD34 strongly positive APL neither expressed Pgp nor contained significant MDR1 transcript levels. Low expression of Pgp by APL cells may provide the biologic basis for the high sensitivity of this leukemia subtype to chemotherapeutic agents in vivo.
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PMID:Significantly lower P-glycoprotein expression in acute promyelocytic leukemia than in other types of acute myeloid leukemia: immunological, molecular and functional analyses. 751 29

To evaluate the expression of multidrug resistance (MDR) on normal and leukemia cells, we examined P-glycoprotein (P-gp) by a newly devised flow cytometric method, utilizing a biotinylated monoclonal antibody (mAb) against P-gp (MRK16), a streptavidin-RED670 conjugate (SA-RED670) and appropriate emission filters. The combination of biotinylated MRK16 (b-MRK16) and SA-RED670 resulted in higher sensitivity as compared with standard methods such as the use of streptavidin-phycoerythrin (SA-PE) conjugate. The sensitivity was examined in K562, K562/ADR, NOMO-1, NOMO-1/ADR and HL60 cells, and compared with the data obtained from reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of mdr-1 gene. P-gp positivity on flow cytometry was 10.4%, 99.9%, 1.4%, 90.4% and 0%, respectively. Mdr-1 mRNA was well expressed in K562/ADR and NOMO-1/ADR cells, but not in NOMO-1 and HL60 cells. In K562 cells, mdr-1 was found after 40 cycles of PCR, but not 25 cycles. These data are well correlated with those from the flow cytometry. We then studied the P-gp expression on normal peripheral blood cells and acute leukemia cells. P-gp was little expressed on peripheral lymphocytes, monocytes and granulocytes. It was also little expressed on blast cells from 5 patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (AML) and 5 acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) expressed P-gp at diagnosis, ranging from 8.5% to 34.5% (16.9 +/- 11.8%) and from 2.3% to 45.6% (24.0 +/- 17.8%), respectively. All 9 relapsed or refractory cases expressed P-gp, ranging from 21.1% to 99.8% (52.2 +/- 29.9%). Significant differences were found in APL, CD34-positive and relapse and refractory cases (P = 0.0006, 0.0007 and 0.0088, respectively). These results indicate that this flow cytometric analysis is useful for the evaluation of clinical MDR status and can identify a group of patients with resistant leukemia.
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PMID:New flow cytometric method for detection of minimally expressed multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein on normal and acute leukemia cells using biotinylated MRK16 and streptavidin-RED670 conjugate. 762 26

Multidrug resistance to a variety of cytotoxic drugs is due to decreased drug accumulation at the intracellular site of drug action. When due to increased energy-dependent drug efflux, this transport change is often associated with increased expression of an efflux pump for various lipophilic compounds, for example the P-glycoprotein which is the product of the MDR-1 gene. However, previously described HL-60 human promyelocytic leukemia cell lines resistant to the cytotoxic effect of anthracyclines have been reported not to express P-glycoprotein. We have isolated, by drug selection, an anthracycline-resistant HL-60 cell line that, in comparison to parental drug sensitive cells, exhibits a multidrug resistant phenotype including diminished intracellular drug retention, cross-resistance to multiple cytotoxic drugs, increased expression of a monoclonal antibody C219-reactive 180 kDa P-glycoprotein detected by Western blot analysis as well as increased expression of MDR-1 mRNA as determined by Northern blot and solution hybridization/RNAse protection analyses. Evidence is presented that the anthracycline-resistant HL-60 cells have amplified the MDR-1 gene.
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PMID:Characterization of an anthracycline-resistant human promyelocyte leukemia (HL-60) cell line with an elevated MDR-1 gene expression. 770 33

Clinical and cytologic characteristics were correlated to immunologic markers in 154 patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) was selected to identify differentiation-associated antigens of both the myeloid and the lymphoid lineages (CD13, CD33, CD14, CD15, CD7, CD34, CD10, HLA-DR, CD19, CD2, CD5, TdT). The expression of multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-170) was also evaluated in 117 patients. Differences in antigenic expression was observed among the various French-American-British (FAB) subgroups. HLA-DR was poorly expressed on the blasts of acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3), and was always found in FAB M5. CD34 was detectable in all M0 cases and only in one M3 (p < 0.001). Lymphoid-associated antigens were positive in 74 cases (48.1%). In particular, CD7 was found in 49 patients (31.8%), and TdT in 30 (21.3%), 15 samples displaying coexpression of these two antigens. The incidence of CD7+ cases was particularly elevated in M0 and M5 AML (p = 0.005). It significantly correlated with the expression of CD34, HLA-DR, P-170 (p < 0.001, p = 0.018 and p = 0.034 respectively), and with a leukocyte count > 50 x 10(9)/l (p = 0.038). Sixty-nine (59%) samples demonstrated P-170 positivity. Again, this phenotype was particularly expressed in the poorly differentiated forms (M5, M0 and M1) and showed significant correlation with the immaturity markers CD34, CD7 and HLA-DR (p = 0.013, p = 0.022 and p = 0.001, respectively). Expression of individual antigens correlated with prognosis. Refractoriness to first line therapy was associated with CD7 expression (p = 0.002) and P-170 (p = 0.001). The CD7 marker was also significantly associated with a very low overall survival (p < 0.001) and continuous complete remission (p < 0.001). CD14 expression also significantly predicted lower survival rates (p = 0.033). The combination (CD7+ CD14+) identified a subset of patients with a particularly adverse outcome. The prognostic value of CD7 expression, alone or in combination with other markers, was confirmed in multivariate analysis.
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PMID:Prognostic value of cell marker analysis in de novo acute myeloid leukemia. 790 93

The ATP-dependent glutathione S-conjugate export pump, named GS-X pump, has been shown to eliminate a potentially cytotoxic glutathione-platinum (GS.Pt) complex from tumor cells, thereby modulating glutathione (GSH)-associated resistance to cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (cisplatin) (Ishikawa, T., and Ali-Osman, F. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 20116-20125). The present study provides evidence that the GS-X pump is functionally overexpressed in cisplatin-resistant human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 (HL-60/R-CP) cells, in which the cellular GSH level was substantially enhanced. Indeed, the rate of ATP-dependent transport of the GS.Pt complex, measured with plasma membrane vesicles, was about 4-fold greater in HL-60/R-CP cells than in HL-60 cells. Three membrane proteins with apparent molecular masses of 200, 110, and 70 kDa were overexpressed in HL-60/R-CP cells, whereas P-glycoprotein (MDR1) was not immunologically detected in the membrane preparations from resistant and sensitive cells. Unlike in HL-60 cells, increased numbers of intracellular vesicles were observed in the cytoplasm of HL-60/R-CP cells. Fluorescence microscopy with syn-(CICH2,CH3)-1,5-diazabicyclo-[3.3.0]-octa-3,6-dione-2,8-dione (monochlorobimane) revealed that the fluorescent glutathione S-conjugate accumulated in intracellular vesicles of the cisplatin-resistant cells in an energy-dependent manner. The GS-X pump is suggested to contribute to vesicle-mediated excretion of GSH-drug conjugates from cells. In addition, both HL-60 and HL-60/R-CP cells underwent cell differentiation in response to 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, retinoic acid, and dimethyl sulfoxide, resulting in proliferation arrest as well as a remarkable decrease in the c-myc mRNA levels. After cell differentiation, a significant decrease was observed in the activity of ATP-dependent transport of the GS.Pt complex in membrane vesicles prepared from both HL-60/R-CP and HL-60 cells. These results suggest that the expression of the GS-X pump in both cisplatin-resistant and -sensitive cells is related to cell proliferation.
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PMID:GS-X pump is functionally overexpressed in cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II)-resistant human leukemia HL-60 cells and down-regulated by cell differentiation. 796 75

In 452 adult patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a series of 22 monoclonal antibodies was used to identify immunophenotypic characteristics of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) as compared to other AMLs (groups FAB M1/M2 and M4/M5). Only those patients with FAB M3 cytology were included in the analysis for which APL was confirmed by the presence of the t(15;17) cytogenetic aberration and the detection of the PML/RAR alpha gene fusion transcript by PCR amplification (35 cases). Significantly fewer APL blast cells were positive for the stem cell antigen, CD34 (p = 0.0001) as well as for HLA-DR (p < 0.0001). With respect to myeloid antigens, APLs less frequently expressed the myelomonocytic antigens, CD11b (p = 0.0001) and CD14 (p = 0.0013), whereas expression of CD33, a pan-myeloid marker, was more frequent in APL (p = 0.0001). CD15, the X-hapten carbohydrate structure (lacto-N-fucopentaose-III), typically expressed at the maturation stage of normal promyelocytes, was found to be sialylated on APL blasts as recognized by differential binding of the anti-CD15 antibodies, VIM-D5 (non-sialylated CD15) and VEP-9 (sialylated CD15). Expression of the T-cell associated CD7 antigen was rarer on APL than non-APL cells (p = 0.0001), as was that of the multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (p = 0.0038). Marginal correlations existed between antigen profile (particularly CD2) and the type of PML/RAR alpha transcripts. In addition to its unique genotypic features, these data establish APL as a distinct immunophenotypic entity.
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PMID:The immunophenotype of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL): an ECOG study. 803 2

The phenomenon of multidrug resistance (MDR) is frequently encountered in clinical situations, and could contribute to the failure of chemotherapy in acute leukemia. Preliminary studies have suggested that MDR1 gene expression in normal hematopoietic stem cells might be downregulated during differentiation. In the present study, we induced a multidrug-resistant promyelocytic leukemia cell line, HL60/DNR, to myeloid differentiation by exposure to all-trans retinoid acid and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). We found that HL60/DNR cells retained the ability to respond to the differentiation stimulus. However, although MTT assays revealed a slight decrease of IC50 in differentiated cells, neither efflux of daunorubicin (DNR), nor expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp), nor quantity of MDR1 mRNA has been downregulated in differentiated cells. We can conclude, therefore, that MDR1 gene expression in this multidrug-resistant myeloid cell line is not modified by induction of its differentiation.
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PMID:Effect of differentiating agents on modulation of MDR1 gene expression in multidrug-resistant hematopoietic HL60/DNR cell line. 809 18

8-Chloro-cyclic AMP (8-Cl-cAMP) produces growth-inhibitory and differentiating activity in the promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL-60. Adriamycin (ADR)-resistant HL-60 (HL-60/AR) cells exhibit the multidrug-resistant phenotype but do not express the mdr1 gene product P-glycoprotein. To explore potential signaling processes that may be involved in this atypical form of drug resistance, 8-Cl-cAMP was used as a modulator of the cAMP second messenger signal transduction pathway. Treatment for 48 hr with a 10% inhibitory concentration of 8-Cl-cAMP potentiated ADR cytotoxicity 14-fold in HL-60/AR cells but not in the parental cell line. 8-Cl-cAMP was stable to hydrolysis in the medium after 48 hr and was present intracellularly predominantly as phosphorylated metabolites (70%) and the parent compound (30%). No difference occurred in ADR accumulation in HL-60/AR cells after treatment with 8-Cl-cAMP. Accompanying the 8-Cl-cAMP-mediated increase in ADR cytotoxicity in HL-60/AR cells was a reduction in the cytosolic type I cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and disappearance of the nuclear PKA holoenzyme. Coincident with these changes in drug-resistant cells was a marked reduction in the DNA-binding activity of the cAMP response element-binding protein to levels equivalent to those in sensitive cells. This effect appears to result from reduced phosphorylation of the cAMP response element-binding protein. These results suggest that the potentiation by 8-Cl-cAMP of ADR cytotoxicity in HL-60/AR cells occurs through down-regulation of nuclear type I PKA and cAMP response element-binding factors whose activities are regulated by PKA.
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PMID:Reversal of resistance to adriamycin by 8-chloro-cyclic AMP in adriamycin-resistant HL-60 leukemia cells is associated with reduction of type I cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and cyclic AMP response element-binding protein DNA-binding activities. 838 2


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