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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (
topoisomerase
)
9,166
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To study the factors contributing to tumor sensitivity to adriamycin (ADR) in vivo, the relationship between mRNA expression of the
MDR1
, GST-pi and
topoisomerase
II genes and tumor response to ADR was examined in six human xenograft tumors derived from two esophageal, two gastric and two colon cancers. A significant tumor response to ADR was observed in two esophageal xenograft tumors of six tumor lines, and one gastric tumor partially responded to ADR. mRNA expression of the
MDR1
and GST-pi genes was elevated in five tumor lines including three ADR responsive tumors, whereas mRNA expression of the
topoisomerase
II gene was detected in all six tested tumor lines. Topoisomerase II mRNA expression levels in ADR responsive tumors were higher compared with those of ADR unresponsive tumors. No significant relationship between mRNA expression of the
MDR1
and GST-pi genes and ADR sensitivity was found. In contrast,
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression was significantly correlated with tumor sensitivity to ADR (p less than 0.01). Moreover,
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression was significantly correlated with the growth fraction (S-phase fraction) in the cell cycle kinetics (p less than 0.01). These results indicate that
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression in association with the high growth fraction may be an important in vivo factor to contribute to ADR sensitivity in human tumors.
...
PMID:Factors contributing to adriamycin sensitivity in human xenograft tumors: the relationship between expression of the MDR1, GST-pi and topoisomerase II genes and tumor sensitivity to adriamycin. 131 32
A non-P-glycoprotein-mediated mechanism of multidrug resistance (non-Pgp MDR) has been identified in doxorubicin-selected sublines of the human non-small cell lung carcinoma cell line SW-1573. These sublines are cross-resistant to daunorubicin, VP16-213, Vinca alkaloids, colchicine, gramicidin D, and 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA). They accumulate less drug than the parental cells and their resistance is not due to the
MDR1
-encoded P-glycoprotein, as the resistant cell lines have lost the low amount of
MDR1
mRNA detectable in parental cells. Here we show that the resistant cell lines also contain less
topoisomerase
II mRNA and enzyme activity than the parental cells. This might contribute to the resistance of these lines to drugs interacting with
topoisomerase
II, such as doxorubicin, daunorubicin, and VP16-213, but cannot account for the resistance to the other drugs. We have tested whether all properties of the non-Pgp MDR cell lines cosegregate in somatic cell fusions between lethally gamma-irradiated, resistant donor cells and drug-sensitive acceptor cells. Whereas a MDR phenotype with reduced drug accumulation and the loss of
MDR1
P-glycoprotein mRNA were cotransferred to the acceptor cells, the decrease in
topoisomerase
II gene expression was not. We conclude that the MDR phenotype, the reduced drug accumulation, and the loss of
MDR1
P-glycoprotein mRNA are genetically linked. They might be due to a single dominant mutation, which does not cause the alteration in
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Genetic transfer of non-P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance (MDR) in somatic cell fusion: dissection of a compound MDR phenotype. 134 62
An etoposide-resistant subline, SBC-3/ETP, from a human small cell lung cancer cell line, SBC-3, was developed by continuous exposure to increasing concentrations of etoposide in culture. The SBC-3/ETP was 52.1-fold more resistant to etoposide than the parent cell line. The SBC-3/ETP was highly cross-resistant to teniposide, adriamycin, vinca alkaloids, 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide, CPT-11 and mitomycin C, and marginally cross-resistant to cisplatin, while the subline showed a collateral sensitivity to bleomycin. Topoisomerase I activity in the SBC-3/ETP was reduced to an extent of one half and
topoisomerase
II activity to an extent of one eighth in comparison with those of the SBC-3. Intracellular accumulation of [3H]-etoposide in the SBC-3/ETP was significantly lower in comparison to the SBC-3. An overexpression of
MDR1
mRNA, and the presence of its product, P-glycoprotein, were detected in the SBC-3/ETP by Northern blotting and flowcytometry using a monoclonal antibody of the protein, MRK16. These results indicate that a decreased activity of
topoisomerase
II is the major factor for the development of etoposide resistance, and that an overexpression of the
MDR1
gene is responsible, in part, for the development of resistance to the drug and some structurally unrelated compounds such as adriamycin and vinca alkaloids.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of an etoposide-resistant human small cell lung cancer cell line. 135 8
The mdr gene, which encodes an energy-dependent multidrug efflux pump termed P-glycoprotein, is expressed in some normal human and rodent tissues, including the adrenal gland, kidney, liver, colon, small intestine, and brain and testis capillary endothelial cells. Because of the important role played by the multidrug transporter in determining sensitivity of normal tissues and resistance of cancers to chemotherapeutic drugs, we and others have been determining the environmental factors which regulate expression of the mdr gene. In previous studies, expression of the human
MDR1
gene has been shown to be regulated by heat shock, arsenite, and cadmium in a kidney carcinoma cell line, and mdr RNA is dramatically elevated in rat liver after partial hepatectomy or treatment of the animals with cytotoxic agents. We have now investigated the genetic response of the mdr gene to acute cytotoxic insults in rodent and human tissue culture cells. Following exposure to several drugs, most of which are known to be substrates for the multidrug transporter, mdr RNA levels were found to increase substantially in the rodent cells, but not the human cells. Furthermore, RNA levels for
topoisomerase
II, an intracellular target for these drugs, decreased in the rodent cells. These results suggest a complex pattern of regulation of mdr RNA levels, depending on animal species and cell type, and possible coordinate regulation with
topoisomerase
II RNA levels.
...
PMID:Regulation of mdr RNA levels in response to cytotoxic drugs in rodent cells. 170 76
The usefulness of
MDR1
, GST-pi or
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression detected by dot blot analysis as an indicator of intrinsic resistance to adriamycin was investigated in 15 fresh human tumor specimens.
MDR1
and GST-pi expression, which is known to be a marker for adriamycin resistance, was detected in six (66.7%) and seven (77.8%) of the nine clinically resistant tumors, respectively. However, in four of the six adriamycin responsive tumors,
MDR1
and/or GST-pi expression were detected. Thus these two markers were not indicators of clinical response to adriamycin. In contrast,
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression was significantly correlated with clinical response (p less than 0.01, chi 2 test). The expression of
topoisomerase
II mRNA was detected at a high level in five (83.3%) of the 6 clinically responsive tumors, and the other nine tumors resistant to adriamycin treatment exhibited undetectable or low levels of
topoisomerase
II mRNA. We therefore suggest that the level of
topoisomerase
II mRNA expression is a useful marker of the clinical response to adriamycin.
...
PMID:Expression of MDR1, GST-pi and topoisomerase II as an indicator of clinical response to adriamycin. 185 Feb 21
Tumor cell resistance to cytotoxic drugs is considered one of the major obstacles to successful chemotherapy. Multidrug resistance (MDR) describes the simultaneous expression of cellular resistance to a wide range of structurally and functionally unrelated drugs. The development of the multidrug resistance phenotype is accompanied by multiple morphological and biochemical changes: (a) increased glutathione levels in the cytoplasm, (b) modified levels of enzymes in the nucleus, particularly
topoisomerase
II, (c) increased DNA repair capacity and (d) overexpression of the (human)
MDR1
gene encoding a transmembrane efflux pump (P-glycoprotein, gp-170), which leads to decreased intracellular accumulation and therefore to resistance to a variety of cytotoxic drugs. In this report we describe a competitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay for the absolute quantification of
MDR1
mRNA. This assay uses a transcript generated in vitro as an internal standard which is later coamplified together with the
MDR1
cDNA. Both cDNAs exhibit the same
MDR1
primer sites but differ in the length of the amplicon. For a second round of amplification we applied nested
MDR1
primers and were successful in improving the sensitivity of this competitive PCR system. This test for characterizing the
MDR1
expression offers high sensitivity and specificity and is therefore of great clinical relevance. It should be useful in improving monitoring and design of chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Competitive nested polymerase chain reaction for quantification of human MDR1 gene expression. 751 88
We have analysed the contribution of several parameters, e.g. drug accumulation,
MDR1
P-glycoprotein (P-gp), multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) and
topoisomerase
(topo) II, to drug resistance in a large set of drug-resistant variants of the human non-small-cell lung cancer cell line SW-1573 derived by selection with low concentrations of doxorubicin or vincristine. Selection with either drug nearly always resulted in MDR clones. The resistance of these clones could be explained by reduced drug accumulation and was associated with a decrease rather than an increase in the low
MDR1
mRNA level. To test whether a decrease in
MDR1
mRNA indirectly affected resistance in these cells, we introduced a
MDR1
-specific hammerhead ribozyme into wild-type SW-1573 cells. Although this led to a substantial reduction in
MDR1
mRNA, it did not result in resistance. In all resistant clones we found an altered form of the multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP), migrating slightly slower during SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis than MRP in parental cells. This altered MRP was also present in non-P-gp MDR somatic cell hybrids of the SW-1573 cells, demonstrating a clear linkage with the MDR phenotype. Treatment of crude cellular membrane fractions with N-glycanase, endoglycosidase H or neuraminidase showed that the altered migration of MRP on SDS-PAGE is due to a post-translational modification. There was no detectable difference in sialic acid content. In most but not all doxorubicin-selected clones, this MDR phenotype was accompanied by a reduction in topo II alpha mRNA level. No reduction was found in the clones selected with vincristine. We conclude from these results that selection of the SW-1573 cell line for low levels of doxorubicin or vincristine resistance, predominantly results in MDR with reduced drug accumulation associated with the presence of an altered MRP protein. This mechanism can be accompanied by other resistance mechanisms, such as reduced topo II alpha mRNA in case of doxorubicin selection.
...
PMID:Altered MRP is associated with multidrug resistance and reduced drug accumulation in human SW-1573 cells. 764 Feb 9
WEHI-3B/NOVO is a cloned murine leukemia cell line selected for resistance to novobiocin that is cross-resistant to the cytotoxic action of etoposide (VP-16) and to a lesser extent to a variety of other
topoisomerase
II (topo II)-reactive drugs. We have reported previously (Cancer Res. 52: 2782-2790, 1992) that WEHI-3B/NOVO cells exhibit a pronounced decrease in VP-16 induced DNA-topo II cross-link formation compared to the parental WEHI-3B/S cell line in intact cells, in the absence of a significant difference in the P4 unknotting activity of topo II assayed in nuclear extracts. Because the pattern of cross-resistance was suggestive of a topo II-mediated mechanism, we have ascertained whether a change in topo II can account for the multidrug-resistant phenotype of WEHI-3B/NOVO cells. No differences existed between WEHI-3B/S and WEHI-3B/NOVO cells in topo II mRNA and protein levels, as well as in the amount of topo II associated with the nuclear matrix. Neither sensitive nor resistant cells expressed detectable levels of the
MDR1
gene; however, VP-16 accumulation in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was 3-4-fold less than that present in WEHI-3B/S cells, whereas doxorubicin accumulation was the same in both cell lines. Over the first 60 s, no difference existed in the rate of uptake of VP-16 between parental and resistant cells; however, beyond the first 60 s of incubation, [3H]VP-16 accumulated to a greater extent in parental sensitive cells. Thus, an increased rate of efflux of VP-16 was responsible for the lower steady-state concentration of the drug in resistant cells. The efflux Km for VP-16 in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was 254.7 microM and the Vmax was 10.4 pmol/s/10(7) cells. In the presence of the inhibitors of energy metabolism, sodium azide and deoxyglucose, the efflux of VP-16 was markedly inhibited; readdition of glucose restored the original efflux rate. Northern blot analyses using the human 10.1 probe for the 3'-terminal region of the multidrug-resistance protein (MRP) cDNA revealed a mRNA species of approximately 6 kb in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells but not in WEHI-3B/S cells. Overexpression was associated with amplification of the cognate gene. To ascertain whether the overexpressed gene in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was the murine MRP or a different member of the same superfamily of ATP-binding ABC cassette transporters, a 341-bp MRP cDNA probe was generated from a murine genomic library.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increased rate of adenosine triphosphate-dependent etoposide (VP-16) efflux in a murine leukemia cell line overexpressing the multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) gene. 767 Dec 47
Previous studies have shown that the in vitro-selected adriamycin-resistant human small-cell lung-carcinoma cell line GLC4-ADR150 displays multidrug resistance as the result of 3-fold decreased DNA-
topoisomerase
II (topo II) activity and a 6-fold reduction in adriamycin accumulation. Not the
MDR1
gene, but the MRP gene, was over-expressed in this cell line. The aim of our study was to establish which of these drug-resistance-associated factors are already involved in drug resistance occurring at early steps of selection with adriamycin. To address this question, changes in expression of topo II alpha/topo II beta, MRP and drug accumulation were measured along with adriamycin resistance (from 2- to 10- to 150-fold) and in a partial revertant cell line (10-fold resistant). Topo II alpha and II beta mRNA and protein levels were decreased in the resistant sub-lines, except in the 10-fold-resistant cell line. Cellular daunorubicin accumulation was decreased 1.2- to 5-fold with increasing resistance. MRP mRNA was over-expressed in all resistant sub-lines, with a marked increase in the 10-fold-resistant cells (level of expression as high as in the GLC4-ADR150 cells). Expression of an ATP-binding 190-kDa membrane protein and Western-blot analysis with anti-MRP anti-serum ASPKE, was in accordance with the expression of MRP mRNA in all cell lines. Expression of MRP mRNA and protein, however, was not proportional with the decrease in drug accumulation in all resistant sub-lines. This study also shows that drug accumulation, topo II and MRP expression were all changed at the earliest stage of resistance development of GLC4 cells upon adriamycin selection.
...
PMID:Resistance-associated factors in human small-cell lung-carcinoma GLC4 sub-lines with increasing adriamycin resistance. 772 50
To study the mechanisms of the acute induction of drug resistance in cancer cells, we have established a model system in which adriamycin (ADM) induces immediate drug resistance. In this system, human colon carcinoma HT-29 cells were pretreated for 1 h with a subtoxic dose of ADM (0.3 micrograms/ml) and incubated for 24 h in drug-free medium. Then the cells were treated for 1 h with ADM, and the cell survival was determined in terms of colony-forming ability. The survival of the pretreated cells was increased up to 100-fold, as compared with that of untreated cells. Such increased survival, however, was observed only after high doses of ADM (2 to 8 micrograms/ml); more than 99% of the cells were killed. These results indicate that only a small fraction of ADM-pretreated cells acquire the ADM-resistant phenotype. Similar induced resistance was observed in five of seven subclones isolated from HT-29 cells by limiting dilution, suggesting that the majority of cells in the parental HT-29 population could acquire the ADM-resistant phenotype. In the subclone HT-29T9, the ADM pretreatment induced concomitant resistance to daunomycin, VP-16, and VM-26 but not to agents other than
topoisomerase
II inhibitors. The ADM-induced drug resistance did not accompany
MDR1
gene expression and could not be overcome by verapamil, a P-glycoprotein inhibitor. The present system could be useful to study the acute induction mechanism(s) of ADM-resistance, which could be relevant to clinical resistance in patients.
...
PMID:Acute induction of adriamycin-resistance in human colon carcinoma HT-29 cells exposed to a sublethal dose of adriamycin. 773 Jan 48
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