Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Mammalian tumours displaying multidrug resistance overexpress a plasma membrane protein (P-glycoprotein), which is encoded by the MDR1 gene and apparently functions as an energy-dependent drug efflux pump. Tissue-specific expression of MDR1 and other members of the MDR gene family has been observed in normal cells, suggesting a role for P-glycoproteins in secretion. We have isolated a gene from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that encodes a protein very similar to mammalian P-glycoproteins. Deletion of this gene resulted in sterility of MATa, but not of MAT alpha cells. Subsequent analysis revealed that the yeast P-glycoprotein is the product of the STE6 gene, a locus previously shown to be required in MATa cells for production of a-factor pheromone. Our findings suggest that the STE6 protein functions to export the hydrophobic a-factor lipopeptide in a manner analogous to the efflux of hydrophobic cytotoxic drugs catalysed by the related mammalian P-glycoprotein. Thus, the evolutionarily conserved family of MDR-like genes, including the hlyB gene of Escherichia coli and the STE6 gene of S. cerevisiae, encodes components of secretory pathways distinct from the classical, signal sequence-dependent protein translocation system.
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PMID:The yeast STE6 gene encodes a homologue of the mammalian multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein. 256 66

We describe the selection of 3 new multidrug-resistant cell lines derived from tumor cells of different metastatic phenotypes within the Dunning R3327 model of rat prostatic carcinoma. Cell lines of weak (AT2) and strong (AT3 and MAT-LyLu) metastatic behavior were cultured in vitro and challenged with doxorubicin at progressively increasing concentrations. Chemosensitivity was determined colorimetrically by release of precipitated formazan pigment (MTT assay). Expression of the multidrug-resistance glycoprotein (P-170) was monitored immunocytochemically and by Western blotting using monoclonal antibody C219. The behavior of the parental and resultant drug-resistant cells was assessed by their growth in syngeneic rats. Doxorubicin challenge of the initially drug-sensitive parental prostatic carcinoma cell lines resulted in the rapid development of multidrug resistance together with simultaneous expression of P-glycoprotein. While lung and lymph-node metastases developed in host animals inoculated with parental AT3 and MAT-LyLu cells, no metastases developed in the multidrug-resistant progeny of these cell lines. This study has shown that Dunning rat prostate-carcinoma cell lines, previously sensitive to different cytotoxic agents, rapidly become multidrug-resistant and express P-glycoprotein following exposure to doxorubicin. Furthermore, development of multidrug resistance is associated with a less aggressive tumor phenotype and loss of metastatic potential. Nevertheless, it is unlikely that the non-metastatic phenotype of Dunning rat prostatic carcinoma cells is solely associated with expression of P-glycoprotein. These new multidrug-resistant cell lines exhibiting an altered behavioral phenotype will provide a valuable model with which to analyze the relationship between expression of P-glycoprotein and the metastatic phenotype of prostatic carcinoma cells.
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PMID:Establishment and in vivo characterization of multidrug-resistant dunning R3327 rat prostate-carcinoma cell-lines. 791 Aug 10

Phenylbutyrate (PB), a novel lead compound for prostate cancer therapy, has molecular activities distinct from its metabolite, phenylacetate (PA). Both PB and PA promote differentiation in human prostate cancer cell lines, yet little data exist comparing the cytotoxic effects of each drug. We found that PB is more potent than PA in vitro; PB is 1.5-2.5 times more active at inhibiting growth and inducing programmed cell death than PA at clinically achievable doses against each human prostate cancer line studied. PB is equipotent to sodium butyrate, which induces apoptosis and differentiation through multiple mechanisms. Exposure of prostate cancer cell lines to PB reduces their DNA synthesis, leads to fragmentation of genomic DNA, and causes 50-60% of cells to undergo apoptosis. These PB-induced effects are 2-10 times greater than those of the control or PA. The stereotypical changes of apoptosis can be seen with sodium butyrate at similar concentrations, but not with PA. Prostate cancer cell lines overexpressing P-glycoprotein or possessing heterogeneous molecular alterations, including p53 mutations, are also sensitive to the effects of PB. In vivo, Copenhagen rats treated with oral PB had delayed growth of the androgen refractory Dunning R-3327 MAT-LyLu prostate cancer subline by 30-45% in a dose-dependent manner. These results demonstrate that PB induces cytotoxicity via apoptosis in human prostate cancer, in addition to its differentiating properties.
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PMID:Phenylbutyrate induces apoptosis in human prostate cancer and is more potent than phenylacetate. 981 81