Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Breast cancer is a chemosensitive tumour and anthracyclines are one of the most active cytotoxic agents in chemotherapy treatment. Failure after anthracycline-containing chemotherapy is a poor prognostic factor because of low response rate to salvage chemotherapy. Several factors like P-glycoprotein mediated drug resistance (
MDR
-1 or MRP), glutathione or amplification of
topoisomerase
II have been found to be involved in anthracycline resistance. No clear benefit for patients treated with 'resistance-modifier' agents like verapamil, dexverapamil or quinidine has yet been demonstrated. Most clinical studies with non-cross resistant cytotoxic agents are lacking a strict definition of anthracycline resistance. A strict definition of anthracycline resistance implies progressive disease during anthracycline chemotherapy. Among the cytotoxic drugs only 5-Fluorouracil (given as 24 h continuous infusion with folinic acid) and the taxanes produce more than 20% objective remission (RR) in case of anthracycline resistance, whereas the highest response rate was reported for docetaxel (32-57%). Only few randomized studies were performed: docetaxel showed higher anti-tumor activity than methotrexat/5-FU (RR: 42% vs 19%, P<0.001) or mitomycin/vinblastine (RR: 30% vs 12%;P<0.001) and treatment with paclitaxel (175 mg/m(2)) was in favour to mitomycin (RR 17% vs 6%). In combination chemotherapy most activity have been reported for paclitaxel plus high-dose 5-fluorouracil (given as 24 h continuous infusion with folinic acid) (RR: 58%) or for docetaxel plus cisplatinum (RR: 46%). High-dose regimens with growth factor or stem cell support seems to be active in anthracycline-resistant disease but the toxicity is considerable. In conclusion, the taxanes, especially docetaxel as single agent or paclitaxel plus high-dose 5-FU, are the most promising therapeutic options in treatment of anthracycline resistant disease. Further clinical phase II/III studies in breast cancer should include exact definition of anthracycline pretreatment and resistance.
...
PMID:Current options in treatment of anthracycline-resistant breast cancer. 1054 72
Although the prognosis for adults with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) has improved over the past 10 years, overall results remain modest. Current research areas in the treatment of AML include dose-intensive therapy and stem-cell transplantation (SCT), immunotherapy, modulation of leukemia resistance (eg, multidrug resistance [
MDR
] Inhibitors), differentiation therapy (eg, retinolds), exploitation of different disease pathophysiology (eg, angiogenesis inhibitors, apoptosis-inducing agents), targeted therapy (eg, monoclonal antibodies, gene therapy), and the development of additional active chemotherapeutic agents with different mechanisms of action. Topotecan, a
topoisomerase
-I Inhibitor, may potentially enhance the activity of standard induction chemotherapy with cytosine arabinoside (cytarabine) and
topoisomerase
-II inhibitors. Topotecan is being investigated as salvage and front-line therapy for AML in combination with etoposide, cytarabine, or cyclophosphamide. The role that topotecan will eventually play In the treatment of AML is not yet clear, but encouraging results from triple combination induction therapy In patients with unfavorable prognoses warrant further investigation.
...
PMID:New developments in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia: focus on topotecan. 1062 25
In order to investigate the mechanisms of drug resistance arising in tumor cells, we investigated the capacity of fluoroquinolones to inhibit the in vitro growth of WEHI-3B monomyelocytic leukemia cells and then we established a variant of this line (currently maintained in the absence of drug). The line, named WEHI-3B/CPX, expresses a specific resistance to ciprofloxacin (CPX; resistance index=17.3+/-2.2), and does not show cross-resistance with other fluoroquinolones, camptothecin and
topoisomerase
II inhibitors such as doxorubicin, etoposide and teniposide. Although a little decrease in intracellular accumulation of CPX is observed in WEHI-3B/CPX cells, these cells do not express
MDR
or LRP markers, and the resistance is not circumvented by verapamil. Purified nuclear extracts from WEHI-3B and WEHI-3B/CPX cells were tested for topoisomerase I catalytic activity and checking in vitro topoisomerase I sensitivity to CPX and camptothecin inhibition, but no difference was observed. As the treatment with CPX showed that the resistant cell line suffers a significantly lower number of breaks in the DNA molecule we also addressed our investigations to the
topoisomerase
II-dependent DNA cleavage that, in the resistant clone, was found dramatically less susceptible to be enhanced by CPX both in pre-strand and post-strand DNA passage conditions. WEHI-3B/CPX cells do not express any character of multidrug resistance and represent a rare case of specific drug resistance to CPX. The specific resistance to CPX observed in these cells is related to a functional decrease of
topoisomerase
II cleavage activity. It could be consequent to a decreased binding affinity of CPX for the
topoisomerase
II--DNA complex or to a decreased affinity or specificity of
topoisomerase
II for its DNA cleavage sites.
...
PMID:Altered DNA-cleavage activity of topoisomerase II from WEHI-3B leukemia cells with specific resistance to ciprofloxacin. 1139 72
Maleimide, N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM), and N-methyl-maleimide (NMM) were identified as potent catalytic inhibitors of purified human
topoisomerase
IIalpha, whereas the ring-saturated analog succinimide was completely inactive. Catalytic inhibition was not abrogated by
topoisomerase
II mutations that totally abolish the effect of bisdioxopiperazine compounds on catalytic inhibition, suggesting a different mode of action by these maleimides. Furthermore, in DNA cleavage assay maleimide and NEM could antagonize etoposide-induced DNA double-strand breaks. Consistently, maleimide could antagonize the effect of
topoisomerase
II poisons in three different in vivo assays: 1) In an alkaline elution assay maleimide protected against etoposide-induced DNA damage. 2) In a band depletion assay maleimide reduced etoposide-induced trapping of
topoisomerase
IIalpha and beta on DNA. 3) In a clonogenic assay maleimide antagonized the cytotoxicity of etoposide and daunorubicin on four different cell lines of human and murine origin. at-
MDR
cell lines with reduced nuclear
topoisomerase
IIalpha content are fully sensitive to maleimide, indicating that it is not a
topoisomerase
II poison in vivo. Our finding that
topoisomerase
II is sensitive to maleimide, NMM, and NEM but insensitive to succinimide demonstrates a strict requirement for the unsaturated ring bond for activity. We suggest that the observed antagonism in vitro and in vivo is caused by covalent modification of
topoisomerase
II cysteine residues reducing the amount of catalytically active enzyme sensitive to the action of
topoisomerase
II poisons.
...
PMID:Maleimide is a potent inhibitor of topoisomerase II in vitro and in vivo: a new mode of catalytic inhibition. 1196 Nov 42
Anthranoid laxatives, belonging to the anthraquinones as do anthracyclines, possibly increase colorectal cancer risk. Anthracyclines interfere with
topoisomerase
II, intercalate DNA and are substrates for P-glycoprotein and multidrug resistance-associated protein 1. P-glycoprotein and multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 protect colonic epithelial cells against xenobiotics. The aim of this study was to analyse the interference of anthranoids with these natural defence mechanisms and the direct cytotoxicity of anthranoids in cancer cell lines expressing these mechanisms in varying combinations. A cytotoxicity profile of rhein, aloe emodin and danthron was established in related cell lines exhibiting different levels of topoisomerases, multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 and P-glycoprotein. Interaction of rhein with multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 was studied by carboxy fluorescein efflux and direct cytotoxicity by apoptosis induction. Rhein was less cytotoxic in the multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 overexpressing GLC4/ADR cell line compared to GLC4. Multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 inhibition with MK571 increased rhein cytotoxicity. Carboxy fluorescein efflux was blocked by rhein. No P-glycoprotein dependent rhein efflux was observed, nor was
topoisomerase
II responsible for reduced toxicity. Rhein induced apoptosis but did not intercalate DNA. Aloe emodin and danthron were no substrates for
MDR
mechanisms. Rhein is a substrate for multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 and induces apoptosis. It could therefore render the colonic epithelium sensitive to cytotoxic agents, apart from being toxic in itself.
...
PMID:Cytotoxicity of rhein, the active metabolite of sennoside laxatives, is reduced by multidrug resistance-associated protein 1. 1198 86
Etoposide is an antitumor agent currently in clinical use for the treatment of small cell lung cancer, testicular cancer and lymphomas. Since the introduction of etoposide in 1971, its mechanism of action and potent antineoplastic activity has served as the impetus for intensive research activities in chemistry and biology. This drug acts by stabilizing a normally transient DNA-
topoisomerase
II complex, thus increasing the concentration of double-stranded DNA breaks. This phenomenon triggers mutagenic and cell death pathways. The function of
topoisomerase
II is understood in some detail, as is the mechanism of inhibition of etoposide at a molecular level. Etoposide has shortcomings of limited neoplastic activity against several solid tumors such as non-small cell lung cancer, cross-resistance to
MDR
tumor cell lines and low bioavailability. The design and synthesis of etoposide analogs is an activity of fundamental interest to the field of cancer chemotherapy. In the first part, this article is a survey of the discovery of etoposide, the DNA topoisomerase II structure and mechanism, and the models for drug-enzyme interaction. The last part is concerned with the search for new etoposide analogs based upon an empirical design.
...
PMID:Etoposide: discovery and medicinal chemistry. 1537 7
Hypoxia has clinically been associated with resistance to chemotherapy. The aim of this study was to investigate whether hypoxia induces resistance to doxorubicin and mitoxantrone, two common drugs in cancer treatment, in MCF-7 breast cancer cells, and SW1573 non-small lung cancer cells. In addition, the role of drug transporters P-gp, BCRP and MRP1 was analysed. Hypoxia induced resistance in MCF-7 cells to mitoxantrone shifted the IC(50) value from 0.09 microM (+/-0.01) to 0.54 microM (+/-0.06) under hypoxia, whereas survival of MCF-7 and SW1573 cells in the presence of doxorubicin was not altered. Accumulation of mitoxantrone and daunorubicin, a doxorubicin fluorescent homologue, appeared to be 5.3 and 3.2 times lower in MCF-7 cells, respectively. Cytotoxicity assays showed no increased functionality of the drug transporters P-gp, BCRP and MRP1 under hypoxia. In addition, protein levels of these drug transporters were not changed. Medium of the MCF-7 cells became more acidic under hypoxia thereby causing a decreased uptake of mitoxantrone. Hypoxia induces mitoxantrone resistance in MCF-7 cells not mediated by the three major
MDR
transporters. Hypoxia-induced acidification may cause this resistance by decreased cellular uptake together with a lowered cytotoxicity due to pH-dependent
topoisomerase
type II activity.
...
PMID:Hypoxia-induced acidification causes mitoxantrone resistance not mediated by drug transporters in human breast cancer cells. 1575 Feb 6
Inactivation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) has been shown to potentiate the cytotoxicity of distinct DNA targeting agents including topoisomerase I inhibitors. On the other hand, the PARP-1 deficient cells exhibited resistance to conventional inhibitors of
topoisomerase
II such as etoposide or doxorubicin (DOX). Recently, we observed the extreme sensitivity of PARP-1 knock-out (KO) cells to C-1305, a new biologically active triazoloacridone compound. C-1305 permanently arrested the cells in G2-phase of the cell-cycle. These observations prompted us to investigate more thoroughly the susceptibility of PARP-1 KO cells to DOX and to examine the effect of DOX on the progression of cell-cycle. We determined the uptake of DOX and P-glycoprotein (P-gp) expression in mouse cells and compared it with that in human myeloma 8226/Dox40 cells overexpressing P-gp. Exposure of mouse cells to DOX revealed a reduced drug uptake in cells lacking PARP-1. However, combined treatment with verapamil, a potent
MDR
modulator increased the DOX accumulation. Detailed immunoblotting experiments revealed an approximately threefold higher P-gp level in PARP-1 KO cells as compared with normal counterparts. Interestingly, DOX induced in normal fibroblasts very rapidly G2 arrest whereas in PARP-1 KO cells it blocked primarily the transition between S and G2 resulting in the increase of cells remaining in S-phase. This coincided with the lack of the site-specific phosphorylation of CDK2. Simultaneous inhibition of P-gp in cells lacking PARP-1 resulted in an accumulation of cells in G2. Exposure of mouse cells to high DOX dose activated significantly caspase-3/7 in PARP-1 KO cells.
...
PMID:Major contribution of the multidrug transporter P-glycoprotein to reduced susceptibility of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 knock-out cells to doxorubicin action. 1586 98
Laxaphycin A (laxa A) and Laxaphycin B (laxa B), cyclic peptides isolated from the terrestrial blue-green alga Anabaena laxa or the marine cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula have antifungal and cytotoxic activities. We used numerical videomicrofluorometry and a protocol of multiple labelling with Hoescht 33342 (nuclear DNA), Rhodamine 123 (mitochondria) and Nile Red (plasma membrane) to study the cytotoxicity of these substances in human lymphoblastic cells sensitive (CEM-WT) or resistant (CEM-VLB and CEM-VM1) to anticancer agents. The results indicate a low resistance index of 2 for CEM-VLB cells treated with laxa B or laxa A + lava B. For the three cell strains, following laxa B treatment, we observed an increase of a polyploid cell subpopulation that could result from the alteration of
topoisomerase
-II activity. On the contrary, the simultaneous treatment by laxa A and laxa B led to a decrease of that subpopulation with increasing laxa A doses. However, the effect of laxa A was less pronounced in the CEM-VM1 cells, which present a low intrinsic
topoisomerase
-II activity. For CEM-VLB cells, the higher doses needed can be attributed to their
MDR
resistance. Though we observed a synergistic effect between laxa B and laxa A (the latter is inactive by itself), these results indicate a different mode of action for laxa B and laxa A + laxa B. A more precise study of the mode of action of these compounds is warranted.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic effect of Laxaphycins A and B on human lymphoblastic cells (CCRF-CEM) using digitised videomicrofluorometry. 1587 79
In murine erythroleukemia (MEL) A20 cells (grown in 20 ng/ml adriamycin), mutation(s) producing 10-fold adriamycin (doxorubicin) resistance emerged via an unknown mechanism. Exposure of A20 cells to further stepwise increasing concentrations of ADR in combination with
MDR
modulators (PSC833 and verapamil) aimed to amplify the undetermined A20 mechanism while controlling P-glycoprotein (P-gp) overexpression. The growth of the derived cell lines A30P, A40P and A60P (grown in 30, 40 and 60 ng/ml ADR with PSC833 and verapamil) was initially slow, but eventually reached near WT rates. The new cell lines A30P and A40P were only 1.3- and 1.6-fold more resistant to adriamycin than PC4 A20. Resistance to vincristine was unchanged, but resistance to etoposide (VP-16) was 3.7-fold higher in A40P than A20 (itself 97-fold higher than wild-type). Expression of mdr3 and mrp mRNA tested by RT-PCR showed no increase. Daunorubicin and etoposide accumulation was not different among the cell lines, and no changes were detected in the number of daunorubicin fluorescent lysosomes. In comparison to WT, reduced
topoisomerase
IIalpha (EC 5.99.1.3) activity (20%) and protein expression (80%) was similar to the parental A20 cells. No mutations in the coding sequence of
topoisomerase
IIalpha could be located to account for the high etoposide resistance levels. The inhibitor combination of verapamil and PSC833 prevented the emergence of transporter mediated
MDR
, but not ADR selection of cell lines highly resistant to etoposide.
...
PMID:Selection of non-P-glycoprotein mediated high-level etoposide resistant cell lines by adriamycin with P-gp inhibitors. 1646 81
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