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)

Flavopiridol, the first inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases to enter clinical trials, has shown promising antineoplastic activity and is currently undergoing Phase II testing. Little is known about mechanisms of resistance to this agent. In the present study, we have characterized an ovarian carcinoma cell line [OV202 high passage (hp)] that spontaneously developed drug resistance upon prolonged passage in tissue culture. Standard cytogenetic analysis and spectral karyotyping revealed that OV202 hp and the parental low passage line OV202 shared several marker chromosomes, confirming the relatedness of these cell lines. Immunoblotting demonstrated that OV202 and OV202 hp contained similar levels of a variety of polypeptides involved in cell cycle regulation, including cyclin-dependent kinases 2 and 4; cyclins A, D1, and E; and proliferating cell nuclear antigen. Despite these similarities, OV202 hp was resistant to flavopiridol and cisplatin, with increases of 5- and 3-fold, respectively, in the mean drug concentrations required to inhibit colony formation by 90%. In contrast, OV202 hp and OV202 displayed indistinguishable sensitivities to oxaliplatin, paclitaxel, topotecan, 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea, etoposide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and 5-fluorouracil, suggesting that the spontaneously acquired resistance was not attributable to altered P-glycoprotein levels or a general failure to engage the cell death machinery. After incubation with cisplatin, whole cell platinum and platinum-DNA adducts measured using mass spectrometry were lower in OV202 hp cells than OV202 cells. Similarly, after flavopiridol exposure, whole cell flavopiridol concentrations measured by a newly developed high performance liquid chromatography assay were lower in OV202 hp cells. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that acquisition of spontaneous resistance to flavopiridol and cisplatin in OV202 hp cells is due, at least in part, to reduced accumulation of the respective drugs. These observations not only provide the first characterization of a flavopiridol-resistant cell line but also raise the possibility that alterations in drug accumulation might be important in determining sensitivity to this agent.
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PMID:Characterization of an ovarian carcinoma cell line resistant to cisplatin and flavopiridol. 1069 May 52

We sought to characterize the interactions of flavopiridol with members of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter family. Cells overexpressing multidrug resistance-1 (MDR-1) and multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) did not exhibit appreciable flavopiridol resistance, whereas cell lines overexpressing the ABC half-transporter, ABCG2 (MXR/BCRP/ABCP1), were found to be resistant to flavopiridol. Flavopiridol at a concentration of 10 microM was able to prevent MRP-mediated calcein efflux, whereas Pgp-mediated transport of rhodamine 123 was unaffected at flavopiridol concentrations of up to 100 microM. To determine putative mechanisms of resistance to flavopiridol, we exposed the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 to incrementally increasing concentrations of flavopiridol. The resulting resistant subline, MCF-7 FLV1000, is maintained in 1,000 nM flavopiridol and was found to be 24-fold resistant to flavopiridol, as well as highly cross-resistant to mitoxantrone (675-fold), topotecan (423-fold), and SN-38 (950-fold), the active metabolite of irinotecan. Because this cross-resistance pattern is consistent with that reported for ABCG2-overexpressing cells, cytotoxicity studies were repeated in the presence of 5 microM of the ABCG2 inhibitor fumitremorgin C (FTC), and sensitivity of MCF-7 FLV1000 cells to flavopiridol, mitoxantrone, SN-38, and topotecan was restored. Mitoxantrone efflux studies were performed, and high levels of FTC-reversible mitoxantrone efflux were found. Northern blot and PCR analysis revealed overexpression of the ABCG2 gene. Western blot confirmed overexpression of ABCG2; neither P-glycoprotein nor MRP overexpression was detected. These results suggest that ABCG2 plays a role in resistance to flavopiridol.
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PMID:Overexpression of the ATP-binding cassette half-transporter, ABCG2 (Mxr/BCrp/ABCP1), in flavopiridol-resistant human breast cancer cells. 1120 2

Flavopiridol inhibits phosphokinases. Its activity is strongest on cyclin dependent kinases (cdk-1, -2, -4, -6, -7) and less on receptor tyrosine kinases (EGFR), receptor associates tyrosine kinases (pp60 Src) and on signal transducing kinases (PKC and Erk-1). Although the inhibiting activity of flavopiridol is strongest for cdk, the cytotoxic activity of flavopiridol is not limited to cycling cells. Resting cells are also killed. This fact suggests that inhibition of cdks involved in the control of cell cycle is not the only mechanism of action. Inhibition of cdk's with additional functions (i.e. involved in the control of transcription or function of proteins that do not control cell cycle) may contribute to the antitumoral effect. Moreover, direct and indirect inhibition of receptor activation (EGFR) and/or a direct inhibition of kinases (pp60 Src, PKC, Erk-1) involved in the signal transduction pathway could play a role in the antiproliferative activity of flavopiridol. From pharmacokinetic data in patients it can be concluded that the inhibitory activity (IC50) of flavopiridol on these kinases is in the range of concentrations that might be achieved intracellularly after systemic application of non-toxic doses of flavopiridol. However, no in situ data from flavopiridol treated cells have been published yet that prove that by inhibition of EGFR, pp60 Src, PKC and/or Erk-1 (in addition to inhibition of cdk's) flavopiridol is able to induce apoptosis. Thus many questions regarding the detailed mechanism of antitumoral action of flavopiridol are still open. For the design of protocols for future clinical studies this review covers the essential information available on the mechanism of antitumoral activity of flavopiridol. The characteristics of this antitumoral activity include: High rate of apoptosis, especially in leukemic cells; synergy with the antitumoral activity of many cytostatics; independence of its efficacy on pRb, p53 and Bcl-2 expression; lack of interference with the most frequent multidrug resistance proteins (P-glycoprotein and MRP-190); and a strong antiangiogenic activity. Based on these pharmacological data it can be concluded that flavopiridol could be therapeutically active in tumor patients: independent on the genetic status of their tumors or leukemias (i.e. mutations of the pRb and/or p53, amplification of bcl-2); in spite of drug resistance of their tumors induced by first line treatment (and caused by enhanced expression of multidrug resistance proteins); in combination with conventional chemotherapeutics preferentially given prior to flavopiridol; and due to a complex mechanism involving cytotoxicity on cycling and on resting tumor cells, apoptosis and antiangiogenic activity. In consequence, flavopiridol is a highly attractive, new antitumoral compound and deserves further elucidation of its clinical potency.
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PMID:Mechanisms of action of flavopiridol. 1131 60

Flavopiridol is the first potent inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) to enter clinical trials. Little is known about mechanisms of resistance to this agent. In order to determine whether P-glycoprotein (Pgp) might play a role in flavopiridol resistance, we examined flavopiridol sensitivity in a pair of Chinese hamster ovary cell lines differing with respect to level of Pgp expression. The IC(50)s of flavopiridol in parental AuxB1 (lower Pgp) and colchicine-selected CH(R)C5 (higher Pgp) cells were 90.2 +/- 6.6 nM and 117 +/- 2.3 nM, respectively (P< 0.01), suggesting that Pgp might have a modest effect on flavopiridol action. Consistent with this hypothesis, pretreatment with either quinidine or verapamil (inhibitors of Pgp-mediated transport) sensitized CH(R)C5 cells to the antiproliferative effects of flavopiridol. Because of concern that colony forming assays might not accurately reflect cytotoxicity, we also examined flavopiridol-treated cells by trypan blue staining and flow cytometry. These assays confirmed that flavopiridol was less toxic to cells expressing higher levels of Pgp. Further experiments revealed that flavopiridol inhibited the binding of [3H]-azidopine to Pgp in isolated membrane vesicles, but only at high concentrations. Collectively, these results identify flavopiridol as a weak substrate for Pgp.
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PMID:Effect of P-glycoprotein on flavopiridol sensitivity. 1135 53

Flavopiridol is a broad-spectrum inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases (cdks) and represents the first in this anticancer class to enter clinical trials. In anticipation of the likelihood that, as with other cancer drugs, acquired resistance may limit the drug's efficacy, an acquired resistance model has been established by in vitro drug exposure of the human colon carcinoma cell line HCT116. This stably resistant line, possessing 8-fold resistance to flavopiridol, showed a lack of cross-resistance to the anticancer agents etoposide, doxorubicin, paclitaxel, topotecan, and cisplatin, and notably to other chemical classes of cdk inhibitors: the aminopurines roscovitine and purvalanol A, 9-nitropaullone, and hymenialdisine. Resistance did not seem to be related to differences in the levels of multidrug resistance drug efflux proteins, P-glycoprotein, and MRP1. Moreover, there were no changes in overall drug accumulation between the resistant and sensitive cell lines. Flavopiridol induced cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and inhibition of retinoblastoma gene product phosphorylation on serine 780 in both parental and resistant lines, but the latter required 8-fold higher concentrations to achieve these effects. Cyclin E protein levels and cyclin E-associated kinase activity were increased in the resistant line, suggesting that overexpression of cyclin E may be the mechanism of resistance to flavopiridol. However, transfection of cyclin E to increase expression of this protein did not result in an increase in resistance to flavopiridol. Thus, up-regulation of cyclin E alone does not seem to cause resistance to this cdk inhibitor.
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PMID:Characterization of a human colorectal carcinoma cell line with acquired resistance to flavopiridol. 1164 15

Multimodal therapies play important roles in the treatment of osteosarcoma (OS) and Ewing's family of tumors (EFTs), two most frequent malignant bone tumors. Although the clinical outcome of primary OS and EFTs is greatly improved, the relapsed cases often are associated with multidrug resistance of the tumors and the prognosis of these patients is still poor. Flavopiridol, a pan cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor is a novel antitumor agent that can induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in many cancer cells. However, there have been no studies about the effects of flavopiridol on drug-resistant OS and EFTs. Here, we demonstrated that flavopiridol induced the cleavage of poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) in a time and dose dependent manner in adriamycin-resistant OS and EFTs cells expressing P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 (MRP(1)) as effectively as in their parental cells. Our data also showed that flavopiridol caused the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c and the activation of caspase-9, caspase-8 and caspase-3, with an increase ratio of the proapoptotic protein level (Bax) to the antiapoptotic protein level (Bcl-2 and Bcl-X(L)), while apoptosis was inhibited by pan caspase inhibitor (Z-VAD-FMK) and caspase-3 inhibitor (Z-DEVD-FMK), not by caspase-8 inhibitor (Z-IETD-FMK). The treatment with flavopiridol further inhibited the tumor growth in mouse models of the drug-resistant OS and EFTs. These results suggest that flavopiridol might be promising in clinical therapy for the relapsed OS and EFTs.
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PMID:Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, flavopiridol, induces apoptosis and inhibits tumor growth in drug-resistant osteosarcoma and Ewing's family tumor cells. 1752 Jun 76

The role of breast cancer resistance protein (Bcrp) and the combined activities of Bcrp and P-glycoprotein (P-gp, Mdr1a/1b) in limiting the brain penetration of drugs at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) were investigated using wild-type FVB, Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-), Bcrp(-/-), and Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-)Bcrp(-/-) mice. Four drugs, flavopiridol, imatinib mesylate (Gleevec), PF-407288, and prazosin, with different transport specificity for BCRP/Bcrp and MDR1/Mdr1a were selected, and the drug levels in plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and brain of mice were determined. Flavopiridol and prazosin were identified as substrates for both mouse Bcrp and Mdr1a with greater transport associated with Bcrp. The brain/plasma (B/P) ratios at 0.5 and 2 h in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-) and Bcrp(-/-) mice were 1- to 2-fold for both compounds, whereas the ratios in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-)Bcrp(-/-) mice were more than 5-fold of those observed in FVB mice. For imatinib, a better substrate of P-gp than Bcrp, the B/P ratios in Bcrp(-/-) were comparable to those in FVB mice, whereas the B/P ratios in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-) and Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-)Bcrp(-/-) mice were more than 4- and 28-fold of those in FVB mice at both time points, respectively. Finally, the Bcrp-specific substrate PF-407288 exhibited comparable B/P ratios in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-) and Bcrp(-/-) mice and slightly but significantly increased B/P ratios in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-)Bcrp(-/-) mice compared with those in FVB mice. The B/P ratios of compounds in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-)Bcrp(-/-) mice compared with those in Mdr1a/1b(-/-), (-/-) mice clearly demonstrate that Bcrp impairs the brain penetration of its substrates. Moreover, P-gp and Bcrp at BBB function synergistically to limit the brain penetration of shared substrates.
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PMID:The effect of breast cancer resistance protein and P-glycoprotein on the brain penetration of flavopiridol, imatinib mesylate (Gleevec), prazosin, and 2-methoxy-3-(4-(2-(5-methyl-2-phenyloxazol-4-yl)ethoxy)phenyl)propanoic acid (PF-407288) in mice. 1922 39