Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A novel multidrug resistance modulator, RS-33295-198, circumvented drug resistance in human, mouse, and Chinese hamster cell lines overexpressing P-glycoprotein. It enhanced the antiproliferative activity of doxorubicin, vincristine, etoposide, and paclitaxel and increased doxorubicin retention in multidrug-resistant hamster CHRC5 cells. RS-33295-198 modulated doxorubicin resistance in a murine P388/ADR leukemia model when administered ip via continuous minipump delivery, ip by bolus injection, and orally; it also improved the efficacy of vincristine toward P388/VCR leukemia when given ip or po. RS-33295-198 showed weak activity in enhancing doxorubicin efficacy against a multidrug-resistant human sarcoma xenograft.
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PMID:RS-33295-198: a novel, potent modulator of P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance. 764 63

With the increasing use of inducers of cellular differentiation in the treatment of leukaemia, it is essential to understand the relationship between differentiation and the expression of the multidrug resistance. Using the K562 human leukaemia cell line and its multidrug resistant subline K562/E15B, differentiation was examined along two different pathways, megakaryocyte in response to treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), and erythroid in response to treatment with sodium butyrate, in the same cell line. P-glycoprotein expression was increased in the multidrug resistant K562/E15B subline, but not induced in the parental K562 cell line. However, both treatments conferred a different phenotype on the drug resistant subline. TPA treatment caused an increase in P-glycoprotein, increased drug resistance and decreased rhodamine-123 accumulation which was verapamil sensitive, demonstrating that TPA induced a fully functional P-glycoprotein. However, sodium butyrate treatment caused an increase in P-glycoprotein without increased drug resistance or without decreased rhodamine-123 accumulation suggesting that the P-glycoprotein induced by sodium butyrate was nonfunctional. These results stress the importance of examining not only the expression of P-glycoprotein in cells, but also the function of the P-glycoprotein induced.
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PMID:Expression of multidrug resistance in response to differentiation in the K562 human leukaemia cell line. 764 52

In the clinical therapy of cancer, resistance to many cytostatic drugs is a major cause of treatment failure. Among other mechanisms, the expression and pumping activity of P-glycoprotein (PGP) in the membrane of resistant cancer cells is responsible for the reduced uptake of cytostatics. The blockade or inhibition of PGP activity by chemosensitisers seems to be a tenable way to restore sensitivity to antineoplastic drugs and therapeutic efficacy. In the present work the influence of the new chemosensitiser dexniguldipine on rhodamine-123 accumulation in multidrug-resistant leukaemia cells was investigated. Dexniguldipine increases cellular rhodamine-123 accumulation dose-dependently.pEC50 values (-log concentration of drug showing a half maximal effect) in accumulation studies are dependent on pH of the test system and are in the range of 6.5 (pH 7.2) to 7.2 (pH 8.0) for dexniguldipine. In comparison with other chemosensitisers such as SDZ PSC 833, cyclosporin A, verapamil, dipyridamole, quinidine and amiodarone, dexniguldipine is the most potent drug in this test system. In addition to equilibrium measurements of rhodamine-123 accumulation, efflux of rhodamine-123 was analysed in the absence and presence of chemosensitisers. A clear dose-dependency was seen and, moreover, a dramatic decrease in efflux rates was achieved in the presence of chemosensitisers. The described system can be used to investigate PGP-mediated drug transport on a pharmacological and biochemical basis.
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PMID:Influence of dexniguldipine-HC1 on rhodamine-123 accumulation in a multidrug-resistant leukaemia cell line: comparison with other chemosensitisers. 765 42

Multidrug resistance (MDR) is associated with poor prognosis in leukemia, and anthracyclines, which are used in the treatment of leukemia, are associated with the expression of P-glycoprotein and the development of MDR. We report here that idarubicin, a new anthracycline approved for use in the treatment of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), did not induce P-glycoprotein expression in the K562 human leukemia cell line under conditions where daunorubicin, doxorubicin and epirubicin did induce expression of P-glycoprotein. The P-glycoprotein expressing, multidrug resistant sublines developed to daunorubicin (K/DNR), doxorubicin (K/DOX) and epirubicin (K/EPR) were cross-resistant to the other anthracyclines and to vinblastine, taxol, colchicine and actinomycin D, but were not resistant to idarubicin or etoposide. The idarubicin treated subline, K/IDA, was only resistant to taxol but was 12-fold sensitized to etoposide, suggesting that idarubicin had affected topoisomerase II in this subline.
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PMID:Development of drug resistance is reduced with idarubicin relative to other anthracyclines. 767 Jan 42

Using an in situ kinase assay we have identified kinases that are elevated in some multidrug resistant cells. Kinases were detected by measurement of 32P incorporation in proteins that were renatured after being subjected to SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes [Ferrell and Martin: J Biol Chem 264:20723-20729, 1989; Mol Cell Biol 10:3020-3026, 1990]. Kinases at 79, 84, and 92 kDa showed increased activity in the multidrug resistant human KB-V1 cells as compared to the sensitive parental KB-3-1 cells. The KB-V1 multidrug resistant cell line exhibited a 170 kDa membrane associated kinase activity that was not present in the parental drug sensitive line. The 170 kDa kinase activity was not affected by Ca++, phosphatidylserine, or cAMP, but was diminished after incubation in the presence of the kinase inhibitors staurosporine, K252a and KT5720. The 170 kDa kinase activity phosphorylated mainly threonine, with no evidence of tyrosine phosphorylation, and was not identical to either the multidrug resistance associated P-glycoprotein or the EGF receptor. Other multidrug resistant cell lines also showed elevated 170 kDa kinase activity, such as the human breast cancer MCF-7/Adr(R) and murine melanoma B16/Adr(R) cells, but the activity was not present in murine leukemia P-388 sensitive or multidrug resistant cells.
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PMID:Identification of a 170 kDa membrane kinase with increased activity in KB-V1 multidrug resistant cells. 769 26

MDR1 gene expression was examined in acute leukemia cells from 75 Japanese patients at diagnosis (50 with acute myeloblastic leukemia [AML]: 10 M1, 18 M2, 5 M3, 8 M4, 9 M5; 25 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia [ALL]: 13 B-precursor, 12 T-lineage). The results of MDR1 mRNA expression by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction were confirmed by immunostaining using the anti-P-glycoprotein monoclonal antibody UIC2 and by a functional study using the rhodamine efflux test. Morphologically, AML M1 cases had the highest incidence of MDR1 gene expression (6 of 10 patients). Phenotypically, CD7 and CD34 were the only surface markers that were significantly associated with MDR1 gene expression (P < .01). In CD7+CD4-CD8- ALL, which is thought to originate from the lymphohematopoietic stem cell, expressed the MDR1 gene with a high incidence (six of eight patients), whereas three surface CD3+ and one CD4+CD8+ T-cell ALL (T-ALL) did not have detectable MDR1 transcripts. Only two cases of 13 B-precursor ALL had MDR1 mRNA, one of which had the Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome. No association was observed between MDR1 gene expression and CD34 positivity in ALL. Our results that MDR1 mRNA was frequently expressed in CD7+ AML and CD7+CD4-CD8- ALL, together with the previous reports indicating clinical similarities between these leukemias, provides a clue to clarify a relationship between CD7+ AML and CD7+CD4-CD8- ALL. In addition, MDR1 expression in CD7+ AML/ALL might be responsible for the poor response to conventional chemotherapies of these types of leukemia.
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PMID:Expression of MDR1 gene in acute leukemia cells: association with CD7+ acute myeloblastic leukemia/acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 769 87

Anti-P-glycoprotein monoclonal antibody JSB-1 and alkaline phosphatase-anti-alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) immunocytochemical staining technique were used to study the relation between P-glycoprotein expression and clinical multidrug resistance (MDR) in 42 patients with acute leukaemia (23 ALL and 19 ANLL). 10 of 17 patients who were diagnosed as refractory or relapsed acute leukaemia were positive with P-glycoprotein expression, while only 3 of 14 newly diagnosed and 1 of 11 who were in complete remission were positive. The preliminary results indicated that there was a close association between the P-glycoprotein expression and the clinical resistance to chemotherapy in some patients.
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PMID:[Detection of P-glycoprotein expression in patients with acute leukaemia and clinical significance]. 771 12

An increasing body of evidence appears to implicate the lipid bilayer of multidrug resistant (MDR) cells with P-glycoprotein activity. Several cationic amphiphilic drugs (CADs) have been extensively described as modulators of MDR. These same agents are also known to (1) inhibit lysosomal acid sphingomyelinase (ASmase), a phospholipid degrading enzyme, and/or (2) induce phospholipidosis in animal tissues or cultured cell lines. In this report, we randomly selected 17 CADs and evaluated their potency in modulating MDR in the murine MDR P388/ADR leukemia cell line. We compared these results with their ability to inhibit ASmase and observed a significant dose-dependent linear relationship (95% central confidence interval), between ASmase inhibition and MDR reversal. This approach permitted us to identify three new modestly potent chemosensitizers: trimipramine, desipramine, and mianserine. Modulation of MDR was not cell line specific, since CADs at 10 microM increased doxorubicin (DOX) and vinblastine (VBL) (but not methotrexate, MTX) cytotoxicity in both P388/ADR and the human MDR cell lines MES-SA/Dx5 and K562/R7, but not in the parental drug-sensitive cells. Although all chemosensitizing CADs at 10 microM significantly increased Rhodamine-123 (Rho-123) accumulation in the human leukemia MDR cell line K562/R7 and most presented significant displacement of the photoaffinity labelling probe iodoarylazidoprazosin, no correlation between these observations and the ability of CADs to sensitize MDR cells to DOX and VBL was found. In conclusion, our study strongly suggests that the chemosensitizing potency of agents such as CADs may be due to a dual mechanism of action: direct antagonism of P-gp activity and indirect modulation of P-gp activity through the disruption of cellular lipid metabolism.
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PMID:Inhibition of lysosomal acid sphingomyelinase by agents which reverse multidrug resistance. 771 13

We looked for bcl-2 protein expression by immunocytochemistry on bone marrow slides from 51 cases of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), of whom 25 received some form of chemotherapy. Forty-six of them had at least 20% bcl-2 positive blasts and the median percentage of positive blasts was 80%, whereas myeloid cells beyond blasts were always negative. No correlation was found between bcl-2 expression and the FAB type of MDS, CD34 expression and P-glycoprotein expression. A strong correlation between weak bcl-2 expression and the presence of a p53 mutation detected by SSCP analysis and direct sequencing was found. Response to chemotherapy (intensive chemotherapy or low-dose Ara-C) and survival were not significantly influenced by the intensity of bcl-2 expression in blasts, although there was a trend for better response to chemotherapy and longer survival in patients with strong bcl-2 expression. This trend was no longer found, however, if patients with a p53 mutation were excluded. Our findings show that blasts from a majority of MDS cases have bcl-2 expression and that strong bcl-2 expression is not associated with a poor prognosis. The correlation between weak bcl-2 expression and p53 mutation suggests a possible downregulation of bcl-2 gene expression by mutated p53, the mechanism of which remains to be established.
Leukemia 1995 Apr
PMID:bcl-2 expression in myelodysplastic syndromes and its correlation with hematological features, p53 mutations and prognosis. 772 10

One of the most exciting areas in clinical oncology today is the translation of laboratory research in drug resistance into therapeutic tools to improve responses to antineoplastic drugs. Two areas of investigation are currently under study in both the laboratory and clinic: reversal of gluthathione-mediated resistance and of P-glycoprotein mediated resistance. Studies are directed toward determining the role of the resistance mechanism in cancer, and toward its reversal. Increased expression of gluthathione and related enzymes, such as the gluthathione S-transferases, has been shown in human tumor samples. Phase I clinical studies with buthionine sulfoxime (BSO) have shown that gluthathione can be depleted without undue normal tissue toxicity. Now, clinical studies are underway evaluating the ability of BSO to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy. Expression of P-glycoprotein has been described in human tumors, with increased levels observed after natural product chemotherapy in some malignancies. Studies with P-glycoprotein antagonists have been conducted in leukemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma and in a variety of advanced malignancies. These studies have employed "first generation" antagonists such as verapamil and cyclosporine which were toxic at concentrations needed to block P-glycoprotein. Currently, studies are underway with "second generation" antagonists such as the dex stereoisomer of verapamil and the cyclosporine analogue, PSC 833. These agents may help determine the role of P-glycoprotein in clinical drug resistance. Together, these studies are aimed toward improving chemotherapeutic sensitivity in human cancer.
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PMID:Chemoresistance in the clinic: overview 1994. 772 60


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