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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)
In this report, we investigate several examples of hypoxia-induced drug resistance and compare them with
P-glycoprotein
associated multidrug resistance (MDR). EMT6/Ro cells exposed to drugs in air immediately after hypoxic treatment developed resistance to adriamycin, 5-fluorouracil, and actinomycin D. However, these cells did not develop resistance to colchicine, vincristine or cisplatin. When the cells were returned to a normal
oxygen
environment, they lost resistance. There was no correlation between the content of adriamycin and the development of adriamycin resistance induced by hypoxia. There was no difference between the efflux of adriamycin from aerobic cells and that from hypoxia-treated cells. The mRNA for
P-glycoprotein
was not detected in the hypoxia-treated cells. These results suggest that hypoxia-induced drug resistance is different from
P-glycoprotein
associated multidrug resistance.
...
PMID:Hypoxia-induced drug resistance: comparison to P-glycoprotein-associated drug resistance. 168 85
Several mechanisms of drug resistance have been defined using cell lines selected for resistance in vitro. However, the relevance of these to tumor cell resistance in vivo remains unclear. We established tumor cell lines from biopsies of human sarcomas before and after doxorubicin therapy. One pretreatment sarcoma line, STSAR90, was 6-fold less sensitive to doxorubicin than was a normal fibroblast line, AG1522. The sensitivities of six other sarcoma lines were similar to that of AG1522. STSAR90 cells did not overexpress
P-glycoprotein
mRNA, by Northern analysis with the pCHP1 complementary DNA fragment. Photoaffinity labeling with the vinblastine analogue N-(p-azido-3-125I-salicyl)-N'-beta-aminoethylvindesine did not show increased
P-glycoprotein
concentrations. Accumulation of [3H]daunomycin was not decreased in STSAR90 compared with a less resistant sarcoma line, STSAR11, nor was the doxorubicin sensitivity of STSAR90 increased by coincubation with verapamil. Glutathione levels were twice as high in STSAR90 as in STSAR11, and glutathione peroxidase activity was 3.5- to 6-fold higher. This was due mostly to an increase in selenium-dependent peroxidase activity. After exposure to doxorubicin, STSAR90 cells formed only half as much measurable hydroxyl radical as STSAR11, as detected by electron spin resonance spectrometry. Doxorubicin sensitivity was increased in STSAR90 cells when intracellular glutathione levels were reduced by buthionine sulfoximine. These results indicate that multidrug resistance due to
P-glycoprotein
-mediated drug efflux is not the only mechanism of doxorubicin resistance that occurs in sarcomas and that glutathione peroxidase-dependent detoxification of doxorubicin-induced
oxygen
radicals may contribute to clinical doxorubicin resistance.
...
PMID:Increased glutathione peroxidase activity in a human sarcoma cell line with inherent doxorubicin resistance. 184 55
Overreplication of DNA associated with gene amplification and drug resistance has been reported to occur after transient hypoxia of rodent cells. Because
oxygen
levels fluctuate in solid tumors, clinical drug resistance might be stimulated by this mechanism. We have therefore studied the effect of transient hypoxia on sensitivity to doxorubicin in human and murine cell lines. Exposure to hypoxia led to a decreased rate of cell proliferation, and most of the observed changes in sensitivity to doxorubicin were consistent with cell cycle-dependent cytotoxicity of this drug. After transient hypoxia, about 10% of the murine cells (EMT6/Ro and KHT-LP1) contained greater than four times the haploid DNA content (greater than 4C DNA), but only 0%-5% of the human cells (MGH-U1, A549, and Hey) had greater than 4C DNA content. Murine cells that had been exposed to hypoxia and reoxygenation, and which had greater than 4C DNA content, were separated by flow cytometry. For KHT-LP1 cells, but not for EMT6/Ro cells, this subpopulation was found to be more resistant to doxorubicin than the subpopulation with less than 4C DNA content and the aerobic control. When resistant KHT-LP1 clones were expanded in the presence of doxorubicin, six of six clones showed amplification of the
P-glycoprotein
gene family. The ability and efficiency of hypoxia to induce DNA overreplication, gene amplification, and drug resistance appears to be cell-line dependent.
...
PMID:Effect of transient hypoxia on sensitivity to doxorubicin in human and murine cell lines. 196 93
Phenoxazine and seven other structurally related compounds were investigated to determine whether they would increase accumulation of Vinca alkaloids in multidrug-resistant (MDR) GC3/C1 (human colon adenocarcinoma) and KB-ChR-8-5 (HeLa variant) cell lines. Among eight compounds examined, phenoxazine caused greater accumulations of vincristine (VCR) and vinblastine (VLB) than the other chemosensitizers. The structure-activity relationship of these compounds for anti-MDR activity suggested an ideal tricyclic ring structure with a basic nitrogen atom at position 10 for modulating the accumulation of Vinca alkaloids. Addition of
oxygen
to position 5 of the tricyclic ring system further increased the activity, implying that a highly electronegative element with one, or more, lone pair of electrons in the nucleus opposite to heterocyclic nitrogen was a requirement for better anti-MDR activity. The relationship between the concentration of phenoxazine and the potentiation of Vinca alkaloid accumulation in comparison to verapamil was examined. For VCR in GC3/C1 cells, maximal modulation indices were: for verapamil, 1.8; phenoxazine, 8.6; and for VLB, 1.3 for verapamil compared to 3.3 for phenoxazine. In KB-ChR-8-5 cells, for VCR the maximal modulating index values were 9.0 and 4.3, respectively, and for phenoxazine and verapamil and for VLB were 5.0 and 3.7, respectively. Accumulations of VLB in GC3/C1 cells were similar in the presence of 1 microM phenoxazine or 10 mM sodium azide plus 10 mM 2-deoxyglucose. The effects of verapamil and phenoxazine on the accumulation of Vinca alkaloid were additive. Further, phenoxazine decreased the efflux of VLB by 30% in KB-ChR-8-5 cell line and 10% in GC3/C1 cells. In addition to enhancing the cytotoxicities of VCR and VLB, phenoxazine competed relatively weakly for binding to
P-glycoprotein
with [3H]azidopine and moderately with [3H]azidoverapamil, at equal concentrations, suggesting that the multidrug transporter may be the primary target for phenoxazine.
...
PMID:Structural determinants of phenoxazine type compounds required to modulate the accumulation of vinblastine and vincristine in multidrug-resistant cell lines. 237 85
P388 leukemia sublines were isolated from leukemia-cell-bearing CD2F1 mice that had been treated in vivo with increasing amounts of diaziquone (AZQ). The sublines isolated for in vitro studies were AZQ19 and AZQ30 which corresponded to the 19th and 30th in vivo passages, respectively. The AZQ19 subline displayed a very low degree of resistance to AZQ (1.5-fold), whereas the AZQ30 subline was sensitive. Both sublines, however, had much higher degrees of resistance to Adriamycin than to AZQ (24-fold for AZQ30 cells and 10-fold for AZQ19 cells). Both cell lines were also more resistant to actinomycin D, colchicine, and vincristine than to AZQ. The AZQ19 line was resistant to the alkylator thio-TEPA to the same degree that it was to AZQ, but the AZQ30 line was sensitive to thio-TEPA. On the other hand, AZQ30 cells were resistant to hydrogen peroxide with a very low degree of resistance (1.27-fold, P less than 0.05), whereas the AZQ19 line was sensitive. Drug accumulation experiments indicated that AZQ-resistant cells differed from the parental line in that they did not accumulate Adriamycin or vinblastine. In the case of AZQ, however, resistant and parental lines accumulated the same amounts of exchangeable AZQ. Using the immunoblotting technique, no
P-glycoprotein
was found in resistant cells. The resistant lines consumed
oxygen
at greater rates than the parental line.
Oxygen
consumption (Mean +/- SD) in sensitive cells was 2.0 +/- 0.4% O2 consumed/min, whereas in resistant cells it was nearly 3.1 +/- 0.6% O2 consumed/min. The increase in
oxygen
consumption with drug resistance was statistically significant (P less than 0.01). The kinetics of production of hydroxyl free radicals and of AZQ free radicals were faster in the resistant lines reflecting, in essence, their increased
oxygen
consumption. It appears that the two sublines analyzed here show resistance mechanisms that may have been elicited by the two distinct chemical constituents of AZQ. Therefore, in the AZQ19-resistant line, the alkylating aspect of AZQ was emphasized, whereas in the AZQ30 line, the quinone and, thus, free radical aspect was emphasized. This is consistent with AZQ30 cells being sensitive to the alkylator thio-TEPA and resistant to hydrogen peroxide, and the AZQ19 line being resistant to thio-TEPA and sensitive to hydrogen peroxide. In addition, the AZQ30 cell line was relatively more resistant than the AZQ19 line to Adriamycin.
...
PMID:In vitro multidrug resistance of P388 murine leukemia selected for resistance to diaziquone. 257 72
Vincristine sensitive (L1210) and resistant (L1210/VCR) L1210 mouse leukemia cells were studied from morphological and histochemical point of view. The morphological and histochemical findings reflected differences in membrane structure and in physiological state of sensitive and resistant cells. Numerous villous projections and cytoplasmic protrusions of the cell surface as well as higher activity of membrane enzymes (5'-nucleotidase, ATPase, alkaline phosphatase) were found in vincristine resistant cells. It is assumed that in resistant cells these differences are connected with overexpression of membrane
P-glycoprotein
. Moreover, in resistant cells more condensed mitochondria were found after their exposure to vincristine. This finding can reflect a higher activity of these organelles in conditions when activity of
P-glycoprotein
is manifested and is in agreement with increased rate of
oxygen
consumption by resistant cells from 2.5 +/- 0.3 to 3.3 +/- 0.2 microliter/min.10(6) cells induced by vincristine.
...
PMID:Characterization of morphological and histochemical changes induced by overexpression of P-glycoprotein in mouse leukemic cell line L1210. 791 60
N-(5,5-Diacetoxypent-1-yl)doxorubicin (1b) is an intensely cytotoxic doxorubicin analogue that retains full potency against tumor cells that express elevated levels of
P-glycoprotein
and are resistant to doxorubicin. 1b was designed to be hydrolyzed in the presence of carboxylate esterases to N-(5-oxypent-1-yl)doxorubicin, an aldehyde capable of existing in equilibrium with a cyclic carbinolamine. To investigate the structural determinants of potency for 1b, we have prepared a series of chemically related compounds in which various omega-[bis(acetoxy)]alkyl or omega-[bis(acetoxy)]alkoxyalkyl groups are substituted at the 3'-amino position of the daunosamine sugar. These groups were selected to assess the effect of chain length,
oxygen
substitution, and carbinolamine ring size on analogue potency. The compounds were evaluated for their ability to inhibit the in vitro growth of the following cell lines: (a) Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, (b) a CHO cell mutant 100-fold resistant to doxorubicin that expresses elevated levels of
P-glycoprotein
, (c) a murine ductal cell pancreatic adenocarcinoma (Panc 02), and (d) a murine mammary carcinoma (CA 755). The most potent members of the series were those that could form a straight chain aldehyde intermediate after esterase-mediated hydrolysis of the omega-bis(acetoxy) groups and give rise to 5- or 6-membered ring carbinolamines. Analogues capable of forming 7-, 8-, or 9-membered carbinolamines were markedly less active. The N-methyl derivative of 1b, which cannot give rise to a cyclic carbinolamine, was 2 orders of magnitude less potent than 1b. A branched chain analogue, 1f, which contained a tertiary carbon atom adjacent to the omega-bis(acetoxy) groups, was also substantially less active than its nonbranched counterpart, 1a. These findings suggest that the chain length of the 3'-amino substituents and the ability of the derived aldehydes to form 5- or 6-membered carbinolamines are critical determinants of biologic potency.
...
PMID:Intensely potent doxorubicin analogues: structure-activity relationship. 952 70
Mammalian liver exhibits expression of members of the family of multidrug resistance (mdr) transporters (P-glycoproteins).
P-glycoprotein
isoforms encoded by mdr1 genes participate in extrusion of an array of xenobiotics into the bile. Induction of mdr1b mRNA expression has been shown to occur in rat hepatocytes in response to hepatotrophic growth factors. As the cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is known to exert a direct mitogenic effect on hepatocytes, its influence on mdr1b expression was investigated. In primary rat hepatocytes cultured in the absence of TNF-alpha, a time-dependent increase in basal expression of mdr1b mRNA and in immunodetectable
P-glycoprotein
was observed. In cells treated with TNF-alpha (4,000 U/ml) for 3 days, expression of mdr1b mRNA and of immunodetectable
P-glycoprotein
was induced approximately twofold. Moreover, intracellular steady-state levels of the mdr1 substrate rhodamine 123 were decreased in cells pretreated with TNF-alpha in comparison to controls, indicating an increase in functional transporter(s) mediating dye extrusion. Treatment of hepatocytes with antioxidants (1 mM ascorbic acid and 2% dimethyl sulfoxide) for 3 days markedly suppressed mdr1b mRNA and
P-glycoprotein
expression both in cells cultured in the presence of TNF-alpha and in the absence of the cytokine, but did not fully abolish mdr1b mRNA induction by TNF-alpha, supporting the notion that reactive
oxygen
species participate in regulation of basal mdr1b gene expression during hepatocyte culture. In conclusion, the present data indicate that by inducing mdr1b expression in hepatocytes, TNF-alpha may affect the capacity of the liver for extrusion or detoxification of endogenous or xenobiotic mdr1 substrates.
...
PMID:Induction of mdr1b mRNA and P-glycoprotein expression by tumor necrosis factor alpha in primary rat hepatocyte cultures. 969 3
Quinoline-containing antimalarial drugs, such as chloroquine, quinine and mefloquine, are mainstays of chemotherapy against malaria. The molecular basis of the action of these drugs is not completely understood, but they are thought to interfere with hemoglobin digestion in the blood stages of the malaria parasite's life cycle. The parasite degrades hemoglobin, in an acidic food vacuole, producing free heme and reactive
oxygen
species as toxic by-products. The heme moieties are neutralized by polymerisation, while the free radical species are detoxified by a vulnerable series of antioxidant mechanisms. Chloroquine, a dibasic drug, is accumulated several thousand-fold in the food vacuole. The high intravacuolar chloroquine concentration is proposed to interfere with the polymerisation of heme and/or the detoxification of the reactive
oxygen
species, effectively killing the parasite with its own metabolic waste. Chloroquine resistance appears to arise as a result of a decreased level of chloroquine uptake, due to an increased vacuolar pH or to changes in a chloroquine importer or receptor. The more lipophilic quinolinemethanol drugs mefloquine and quinine do not appear to be concentrated so extensively in the food vacuole and may act on alternative targets in the parasite. Resistance to the quinolinemethanols is thought to involve a plasmodial homolog of
P-glycoprotein
. As the malaria parasites become increasingly resistant to the quinoline antimalarials, there is an urgent need to understand the molecular mechanisms for drug action and resistance so that novel antimalarial drugs can be designed. A number of modified quinolines and bisquinoline compounds show some promise in this regard.
...
PMID:Quinoline antimalarials: mechanisms of action and resistance and prospects for new agents. 971 45
P-glycoproteins encoded by multidrug resistance type 1 (mdr1) genes mediate ATP-dependent efflux of numerous lipophilic xenobiotics, including several anticancer drugs, from cells. Overexpression of mdr1-type transporters in tumour cells contributes to a multidrug resistance phenotype. Several factors shown to induce mdr1 overexpression (UV irradiation, epidermal growth factor, tumour necrosis factor alpha, doxorubicin) have been associated with the generation of reactive
oxygen
species (ROS). In the present study, primary rat hepatocyte cultures that exhibit time-dependent overexpression of the mdr1b gene were used as a model system to investigate whether ROS might participate in the regulation of intrinsic mdr1b overexpression. Addition of H2O2 to the culture medium resulted in a significant increase in mdrlb mRNA and
P-glycoprotein
after 3 days of culture, with maximal (approximately 2-fold) induction being observed with 0.5-1 mM H2O2. Furthermore, H2O2 led to activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, a nuclear enzyme activated by DNA strand breaks, indicating that ROS reached the nuclear compartment. Thus, extracellularly applied H2O2 elicited intracellular effects. Treatment of rat hepatocytes with the catalase inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole (2-4 mM for 72 h or 10 mM for 1 h following the hepatocyte attachment period) also led to an up-regulation of mdrlb mRNA and
P-glycoprotein
expression. Conversely, antioxidants (1 mM ascorbate, 10 mM mannitol, 2% dimethyl sulphoxide, 10 mM N-acetylcysteine) markedly suppressed intrinsic mdr1b mRNA and
P-glycoprotein
overexpression. Intracellular steady-state levels of the mdrl substrate rhodamine 123, determined as parameter of mdr1-type transport activity, indicated that mdr1-dependent efflux was increased in hepatocytes pretreated with H2O2 or aminotriazole and decreased in antioxidant-treated cells. The induction of mdr1b mRNA and of functionally active mdr1-type P-glycoproteins by elevation in intracellular ROS levels and the repression of intrinsic mdrlb mRNA and
P-glycoprotein
overexpression by antioxidant compounds support the conclusion that the expression of the mdr1b
P-glycoprotein
is regulated in a redox-sensitive manner.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen species participate in mdr1b mRNA and P-glycoprotein overexpression in primary rat hepatocyte cultures. 1019 May 54
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