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)

The human multidrug resistance gene MDR1 encodes a membrane-bound protein, referred to as P-glycoprotein, that acts as a pump to extrude toxins from cells. The 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) of the human MDR1 mRNA is very AU-rich (70%) and contains AU-rich sequences similar to those shown to confer rapid decay on c-myc, c-fos, and lymphokine mRNAs. We tested the ability of the MDR1 3'UTR to act as an mRNA destabilizing element in the human hepatoma cell line HepG2. The MDR1 mRNA has an intermediate half-life of 8 h in HepG2 cells compared to a half-life of 30 min for c-myc mRNA. The MDR1 mRNA half-life was prolonged to >20 h upon treatment with the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. We constructed expression vectors containing the human beta-globin coding region with the 3'UTR from either MDR1 or c-myc. The c-myc 3'UTR increased the decay of the chimeric mRNA, but the MDR1 3'UTR had no effect. We tested the ability of MDR1 3'UTR sequences to compete for interaction with AU-binding proteins in cell extracts; MDR1 RNA probes had a fivefold lower affinity for AU-binding proteins that interact with the c-myc AU-rich 3'UTR. Overall, our data suggest that the MDR1 3'UTR does not behave as an active destabilizing element in HepG2 cells.
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PMID:The AU-rich 3' untranslated region of human MDR1 mRNA is an inefficient mRNA destabilizer. 1044 77

Accumulating evidence suggests the concept that epirubicin and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells cytotoxicity may be mediated by free radicals generation and P-glycoprotein-positive (Pg-p+) cancer cells are more sensitive for LAK cells than their drug-sensitive parental lines. We tested this hypothesis further by exposing drug-sensitive (WT) and epirubicin-resistant MCF-7 human breast tumor cells to epirubicin and LAK cells. Subsequently, we monitored cell proliferation as a measure of cytotoxicity. The cytotoxicity of epirubicin, LAK, and LAK + epirubicin (1/10 of IC50) was evaluated in 400-fold epirubicin resistant MCF-7 EPI(R) (P-glycoprotein overexpressing) and drug-sensitive MCF-7 WT cells. IC50 values were measured using the MTT cytotoxicity test. The MCF-7 EPI(R) cells exhibited an increased susceptibility to LAK cells than did the MCF-7 WT cells. P-gp+ MCF-7 EPI(R) cells were lysed by human LAK cells to a greater extend than were their drug-sensitive counterparts. LAK + epirubicin combined treatment increased susceptibility of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPI(R) cells to LAK cells cytotoxicity. For both cell lines, cytotoxicity was dependent upon the concentration of the epirubicin and effector cell/target cell (E/T) ratio. The resistance of MCF-7 EPI(R) cells to epirubicin appears to be associated with a developed tolerance to superoxide, most likely because of a tree-fold increase in superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and 13-fold augmented selenium dependent glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity. Acting in concert, these two enzymes would decrease the formation of hydroxyl radical from reduced molecular oxygen intermediates. The addition of SOD decreased cytotoxicity of epirubicin and LAK cells. Taken together, these observations support the role of oxygen radicals in the cytotoxicity mechanism of epirubicin and suggest further that the development of resistance to this drug by the MCF-7 EPI(R) tumor cells may have a component linked to oxygen free radicals. It is proposed that production of reactive oxygen species by the treatment of epirubicin and LAK cells can cause cytotoxicity of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPI(R) cells. SOD, catalase, GSH-Px, GST (glutathione S-transferase), and GSH (reduced glutathione) must be considered as part of the intracellular antioxidant defense mechanism of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPI(R) cells against reactive oxygen species.
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PMID:Combined effect of epirubicin and lymphokine-activated killer cells on the resistant human breast cancer cells. 1568 29


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