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Query: EC:3.6.3.44 (
P-glycoprotein
)
13,344
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The decrease of the intracellular concentration of drug in resistant cells compared to sensitive cells is, in most cases, correlated with the presence, in the membrane of resistant cells, of a 170-kDa
P-glycoprotein
responsible for an active efflux of the drug. In an attempt to identify mechanism(s) by which multidrug resistance can be circumvented, we have examined the cellular accumulation of 4'-O-tetrahydropyranyl-adriamycin, alone and in conjunction with various ionophores on the one hand and with cyclosporin A on the other hand. The present study was performed using a spectrofluorometric method with which it is possible to follow continuously the uptake and release of fluorescent molecules by living cells, as the incubation of the cells with the drug proceeds.
Erythroleukemia
K562 cell lines were used. Using experimental conditions in which these ionophores were unable to modify either the intracellular pH, or the transmembrane potential, or to induce an intracellular ATP depletion, we have shown that mobile ionophores as well as cyclosporin inhibit the
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of 4'-O-tetrahydropyranyl-adriamycin in K562 resistant cells, whereas gramicidin, a channel-forming ionophore, does not. The concentration that must be used to inhibit 50% of the efflux was 0.7 microM for valinomycin, 0.4 microM for nonactin, 0.2 microM for nigericin, 1.1 microM for monensin, 0.4 microM for lasalocid, 1.2 microM for calcimycin and 0.4 microM for cyclosporin. Due to the high toxicity of the ionophores, the observation that they increased 4'-O-tetrahydropyranyl-adriamycin accumulation in the multidrug-resistant cells is not correlated with an effect of these compounds on drug resistance. However, the correlation exists in the case of cyclosporin. From our data showing that lipophilic neutral complexes, formed between carboxylic ionophores and metal ions, are both able to inhibit the
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of anthracycline we can infer that the lipophilicity but not the cationic charge is an important physical property.
...
PMID:Mobile ionophores are a novel class of P-glycoprotein inhibitors. The effects of ionophores on 4'-O-tetrahydropyranyl-adriamycin incorporation in K562 drug-resistant cells. 751 90
The basic distinguishing feature of all cells expressing functional
P-glycoprotein
-multidrug resistance (P-gp-MDR) is a decrease in steady-state accumulation drug levels as compared to drug-sensitive controls. In an attempt to identify mechanism(s) by which MDR can be circumvented, we examined the cellular accumulation, in resistant cells, of 4'-O-tetrahydropyranyl-doxorubicin (pirarubicin) alone and in conjunction with various molecules belonging to three different classes: the crown ethers, the tetraalkylammonium salts, and the polyoxethylene amphiphiles. The present study was performed using a spectrofluorometric method which enabled us to follow the uptake and release of fluorescent molecules by living cells while the cells were being incubated with the drug.
Erythroleukemia
K562 cell lines were used. Our data show that the compounds of these three completely different classes were able to increase the incorporation of pirarubicin provided they had a minimum degree of lipophilicity. Study of the growth inhibitory activity of these compounds revealed that cross-resistance to the tetraalkyl ammonium salt increased with the lipophilicity and was equal to 58 for tetraoctylammonium salt, the most lipophilic compound of this series. This demonstrates that neither the presence of a positive charge nor an aromatic moiety is required for MDR recognition.
...
PMID:The effect of crown ethers, tetraalkylammonium salts, and polyoxyethylene amphiphiles on pirarubicin incorporation in K562 resistant cells. 884 34
Cells that overexpress the mdr 1 gene have decreased steady-state accumulation and increased efflux of many anticancer drugs including anthracyclines and vinca alkaloids. The mechanism(s) of
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of drugs is (are) still poorly understood. In an attempt to identify mechanism(s) by which multidrug resistance can be circumvented, the cellular accumulation has been examined of pirarubicin, doxorubicin and idarubicin alone and in conjunction with four vinca alkaloid derivatives--vinblastine, navelbine, vindesine and vincristine. The present study was performed using a spectrofluorometric method with which it is possible to follow continuously the uptake and release of fluorescent molecules by living cells, as the incubation of the cells with the drug proceeds.
Erythroleukemia
K562 cell lines were used. It has been shown that the
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of these three anthracyclines can be inhibited by vinca alkaloids derivatives. At pH 7.2, 50% of the
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of daunorubicin and idarubicin was inhibited by about 40 +/- 10 microM vinblastine and that of pirarubicin by 10 +/- 2 microM vinblastine. The vinblastine concentration required to inhibit 50% of the active efflux of these anthracyclines did not depend on the anthracycline concentrations used, indicating that the inhibition was non competitive. The ability of navelbine, vincristine and vindesine to inhibit the active efflux of pirarubicin was also checked; 15 +/- 3 microM navelbine are required to inhibit 50% of the active efflux but at concentrations lower than 100 microM, neither vincristine nor vindesine were able to inhibit this efflux, indicating that the vinca alkaloids compounds which are the most efficient are the most lipophilic. For the four vinca alkaloids, the concentration required to inhibit 50% of the efflux was lower as the pH was higher. A detailed kinetics analysis of the
P-glycoprotein
-mediated efflux of pirarubicin in the presence of vinblastine indicates a non competitive inhibition with K(I) = 12 +/- 2 microM.
...
PMID:Kinetic analysis in living cells of the inhibition of the P-glycoprotein-mediated efflux of anthracyclines by vinca alkaloids. 974 56