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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human RFC1 (hRFC1) transfected in transport-deficient methotrexate MTXR(R)ZR-75-1 human breast carcinoma cells (MTX(R)ZR-75/
RFC)
were used to investigate the impact of hRFC1 overexpression on influx and concentrative transport of methotrexate (MTX). Eight-fold overexpression of hRFC1, as determined by northern analysis, resulted in a 4-fold increase in MTX influx accompanied by a 2.4-fold increase in the steady-state level of free drug as compared with wild-type ZR-75-1 cells when the extracellular MTX level was 0.5 microM. When extracellular MTX was increased to 10 microM, the increase in influx equaled the increase in the transmembrane chemical gradient for MTX in the transfectant relative to wild-type cells. By 50 min, approximately 16-20 and 25% of the intracellular 3H represented MTX polyglutamates by HPLC analysis at [MTX]e = 0.5 and 10 microM in wild-type and transfected cells, respectively. Overexpression of hRFC1 enhanced sensitivity to MTX in MTX(R)ZR-75-1 cells by more than 250-fold. The data indicate that overexpression of hRFC1 in human cells results in comparable increases in influx and transmembrane gradients. This is different from what was reported when mouse RFC1 was transfected into murine
leukemia
cells, resulting in large, more symmetrical increases in the MTX bidirectional transport kinetics with a much smaller change in steady-state levels. The changes in the human cells transfected with hRFC1 however, were similar to what has been observed by other investigators when RFC1 expression is increased by low folate selective pressure.
...
PMID:Concentrating capacity of the human reduced folate carrier (hRFC1) in human ZR-75 breast cancer cell lines. 963 5
CEM/MTX is a subline of human CCRF-CEM
leukemia
cells which displays >200-fold resistance to methotrexate (MTX) due to defective transport via the reduced folate carrier (
RFC)
. CEM/MTX-low folate (LF) cells, derived by a gradual deprivation of folic acid from 2.3 microM to 2 nM (LF) in the cell culture medium of CEM/MTX cells, resulted in a >20-fold overexpression of a structurally altered RFC featuring; 1) a wild type Km value for MTX transport but a 31-fold and 9-fold lower Km values for folic acid and leucovorin, respectively, relative to wild type RFC; 2) a 10-fold RFC1 gene amplification along with a >20-fold increased expression of the main 3.1-kilobase RFC1 mRNA; 3) a marked stimulation of MTX transport by anions (i.e. chloride); and 4) a G --> A mutation at nucleotide 227 of the RFC cDNA in both CEM/MTX-LF and CEM/MTX, resulting in a lysine for glutamate substitution at amino acid residue 45 predicted to reside within the first transmembrane domain of the human RFC. Upon transfer of CEM/MTX-LF cells to folate-replete medium (2.3 microM folic acid), the more efficient folic acid uptake in CEM/MTX-LF cells resulted in a 7- and 24-fold elevated total folate pool compared with CEM and CEM/MTX cells, respectively (500 versus 69 and 21 pmol/mg of protein, respectively). This markedly elevated intracellular folate pool conferred a novel mechanism of resistance to polyglutamatable (e.g. ZD1694, DDATHF, and AG2034) and lipophilic antifolates (e.g. trimetrexate and pyrimethamine) by abolishing their polyglutamylation and circumventing target enzyme inhibition.
...
PMID:A structurally altered human reduced folate carrier with increased folic acid transport mediates a novel mechanism of antifolate resistance. 980 75
Human CEM-7A cells established by gradual deprivation of leucovorin from the growth medium, display 100-fold overexpression of methotrexate transport activity. We found that this was associated with 10-fold reduced folate carrier gene amplification and 50-fold overexpression of both the principal 3 kb reduced folate carrier transcript and, surprisingly, a novel truncated 2 kb reduced folate carrier mRNA poorly expressed in parental CEM cells. The molecular basis for the generation of this truncated reduced folate carrier transcript and its potential functional role in folate accumulation were studied. Reduced folate carrier genomic and cDNA sequencing revealed that the truncated transcript had an internal deletion of 987 nucleotides which was a result of an alternative splicing utilizing a cryptic acceptor splice site within exon 6. This deletion consisted of the 3'-most 480 nucleotides of the reduced folate carrier ORF and the following 507 nucleotides of the 3'-UTR. These resulted in a truncated
reduced folate carrier protein
, which lacks the C-terminal 160 amino acids, but instead contains 58 new C-terminal amino acids obtained from reading through the 3'-UTR. Consequently, a truncated
reduced folate carrier protein
is generated that lacks the 12th transmembrane domain and contains a new and much shorter C-terminus predicted to reside at the extracellular face. Western analysis with plasma-membrane fraction from CEM-7A cells revealed marked overexpression of both a broadly migrating approximately 65-90 kDa native reduced folate carrier and a approximately 40-45 kDa truncated reduced folate carrier, the core molecular masses of which were confirmed by in vitro translation. However, unlike the native reduced folate carrier, the truncated
reduced folate carrier protein
failed to bind the affinity labels NHS-[3H]MTX and NHS-[3H]folic acid. Stable transfection of the truncated reduced folate carrier cDNA into mouse L1210
leukemia
cells: increased folate accumulation, decreased their leucovorin and folic acid growth requirements, and increased their sensitivity to methotrexate. This constitutes the first documentation of an expressed alternatively spliced truncated reduced folate carrier that, when coexpressed along with the native carrier, augments folate accumulation and consequently decreases the cellular folate growth requirement. The possible mechanisms by which the truncated reduced folate carrier may increase folate accumulation and/or metabolism in cells coexpressing the truncated and native reduced folate carrier are discussed.
...
PMID:Characterization of a human alternatively spliced truncated reduced folate carrier increasing folate accumulation in parental leukemia cells. 1065 5
We have studied the molecular basis for the resistance of human CEM
leukemia
cells to GW1843, a thymidylate synthase inhibitor. GW1843-resistant cells displayed a approximately 100-fold resistance to GW1843 and methotrexate but were collaterally sensitive to the lipophilic antifolates trimetrexate and AG337, which enter cells by diffusion. These cells exhibited a 12-fold decreased methotrexate influx but surprisingly had a 2-fold decreased folic acid growth requirement. This was associated with a 4-fold increased influx of folic acid, a 3.5-fold increased steady-state level of folic acid, and a 2.3-fold expansion of the cellular folate pool. Characterization of the transport kinetic properties revealed that GW1843-resistant cells had the following alterations: (a) 11-fold decreased transport K(m) for folic acid; (b) 6-fold increased transport K(m) for GW1843; and (c) a slightly increased transport V(max) for folic acid. Sequence analysis showed that GW1843-resistant cells contained the mutations Val-29 --> Leu, Glu-45 --> Lys, and Ser-46 --> Ile in the first transmembrane domain of the reduced folate carrier. Transfection of the mutant-reduced folate carrier cDNA into methotrexate transport null cells conferred resistance to GW1843. This is the first demonstration of multiple mutations in a confined region of the
human reduced folate carrier
in an antifolate-resistant mutant. We conclude that certain amino acid residues in the first transmembrane domain play a key role in (anti)folate binding and in the conferring of drug resistance.
...
PMID:Clustering of mutations in the first transmembrane domain of the human reduced folate carrier in GW1843U89-resistant leukemia cells with impaired antifolate transport and augmented folate uptake. 1089 64
Drug resistance of leukemic blasts is correlated to event-free survival and might be predicted by mRNA expression of drug resistance-related proteins. Methotrexate (MTX) is an important component in the treatment of childhood
leukemia
. Mechanisms of MTX resistance include (1) decreased transport via the reduced folate carrier (
RFC)
, (2) altered levels of target enzymes, eg dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and thymidylate synthase (TS), (3) decreased ratio of folylpolyglutamate synthetase (FPGS)/folylpolyglutamate hydrolase (FPGH). We designed competitive templates for each of these genes to measure mRNA expression by quantitative RT-PCR and normalized the expression to that of beta-actin. T-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), relatively MTX resistant compared to common/preB-ALL, displayed higher mRNA levels of DHFR and TS (three- and four-fold higher, respectively; P < 0.001), while FPGS expression was lower (three-fold, P = 0.006) compared to common/preB-ALL. The ratio of (DHFR x FPGH)/(RFC x FPGS) was more discriminating between T-ALL and c/preB-ALL (eight-fold higher; P < 0.001) than either target independently. Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells, considered MTX resistant, expressed two-fold lower levels of FPGS mRNA compared to c/preB-ALL (P = 0.04). The ratio of FPGH/FPGS was more discriminating between AML and c/preB-ALL (four-fold higher; P = 0.001) than either target independently. For the total group of 79 leukemic samples, mRNA expression of DHFR varied 549-fold and paralleled TS mRNA expression (r = 0.80; P < 0.001). Although variations in mRNA expression resembled variations in functional activity, no direct correlations were found for RFC (58-fold variation in mRNA expression), FPGS (95-fold) and FPGH (178-fold). In conclusion, differences in mRNA expression of MTX resistance parameters between leukemic subtypes as detected by competitive RT-PCR are in line with known differences in MTX resistance.
Leukemia
2000 Dec
PMID:mRNA expression levels of methotrexate resistance-related proteins in childhood leukemia as determined by a standardized competitive template-based RT-PCR method. 1118 7
The presence of sequence variants in the
human reduced folate carrier
(hRFC) was assessed in
leukemia
blasts from children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and in normal peripheral blood specimens. A CATG frame shift insertion at position 191 was detected in 10-60% of hRFC transcripts from 10 of 16 ALL specimens, by RFLP analysis and direct sequencing of hRFC cDNAs. In genomic DNAs prepared from 105
leukemia
(n = 54) and non-
leukemia
(n = 51) specimens, PCR amplifications and direct sequencing of exon 3 identified a high-frequency G to A single nucleotide polymorphism at position 80 that resulted in a change of arginine-27 to histidine-27. The allelic frequencies of G/A80 were nearly identical for the non-
leukemia
(42.2% CGC and 57.8% CAC) and
leukemia
(40.7% CGC and 59.3% CAC) genomic DNAs. In cDNAs prepared from 10 of these ALL patients, identical allelic frequencies (40 and 60%, respectively) were recorded. In up to 62 genomic DNAs, hRFC-coding exons 4-7 were PCR-amplified and sequenced. A high-abundance C/T696 polymorphism was detected with nearly identical frequencies for both alleles, and a heterozygous C/A1242 sequence variant was identified in two ALL specimens. Both C/T696 and C/A1242 were phenotypically silent. In transport assays with [(3)H]methotrexate and [(3)H]5-formyl tetrahydrofolate, nearly identical uptake rates were measured for the arginine-27- and histidine-27-hRFC proteins expressed in transport-impaired K562 cells. Although there were no significant differences between the kinetic parameters for methotrexate transport for the hRFC forms, minor (approximately 2-fold) differences were measured in the K(i)s for other substrates including Tomudex, 5,10-dideazatetrahydrofolate, GW1843U89, and 10-ethyl-10-deazaaminopterin and for 5-formyl tetrahydrofolate.
...
PMID:Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the human reduced folate carrier: characterization of a high-frequency G/A variant at position 80 and transport properties of the His(27) and Arg(27) carriers. 1170 57
We determined the mechanisms of resistance of human CCRF-CEM
leukemia
cells to methotrexate (MTX) vs. those to six novel antifolates: the polyglutamatable thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibitors ZD1694, multitargeted antifolate, pemetrexed, ALIMTA (MTA) and GW1843U89, the non-polyglutamatable inhibitors of TS, ZD9331, and dihydrofolate reductase, PT523, as well as DDATHF, a polyglutamatable glycinamide ribonucleotide transformylase inhibitor. CEM cells were made resistant to these drugs by clinically relevant intermittent 24 hr exposures to 5-10 microM of MTX, ZD1694, GW1843U89, MTA and DDATHF, by intermittent 72 hr exposures to 5 microM of ZD9331 and by continuous exposure to stepwise increasing concentrations of ZD9331, GW1843U89 and PT523. Development of resistance required only 3 cycles of intermittent drug exposure to ZD1694 and MTA, but 5 cycles for MTX, DDATHF and GW1843U89 and 8 cycles for ZD9331. The predominant mechanism of resistance to ZD1694, MTA, MTX and DDATHF was impaired polyglutamylation due to approximately 10-fold decreased folylpolyglutamate synthetase activity. Resistance to intermittent exposures to GW1843U89 and ZD9331 was associated with a 2-fold decreased transport via the reduced folate carrier (
RFC)
. The CEM cell lines resistant to intermittent exposures to MTX, ZD1694, MTA, DDATHF, GW1843U89 and ZD9331 displayed a depletion (up to 4-fold) of total intracellular reduced folate pools. Resistance to continuous exposure to ZD9331 was caused by a 14-fold increase in TS activity. CEM/GW70, selected by continuous exposure to GW1843U89 was 50-fold resistant to GW1843U89, whereas continuous exposure to PT523 generated CEM/PT523 cells that were highly resistant (1550-fold) to PT523. Both CEM/GW70 and CEM/PT523 displayed cross-resistance to several antifolates that depend on the RFC for cellular uptake, including MTX (95- and 530-fold). CEM/GW70 cells were characterized by a 12-fold decreased transport of [3H]MTX. Interestingly, however, CEM/GW70 cells displayed an enhanced transport of folic acid, consistent with the expression of a structurally altered RFC resulting in a 2.6-fold increase of intracellular folate pools. CEM/PT523 cells displayed a markedly impaired (100-fold) transport of [3H]MTX along with 12-fold decreased total folate pools. In conclusion, multifunctional mechanisms of resistance in CEM cells have a differential impact on cellular folate homeostasis: decreased polyglutamylation and transport defects lead to folate depletion, whereas a structurally altered RFC protein can provoke expanded intracellular folate pools.
...
PMID:Multiple mechanisms of resistance to methotrexate and novel antifolates in human CCRF-CEM leukemia cells and their implications for folate homeostasis. 1184 83
We have studied the molecular basis of resistance of multiple human
leukaemia
CCRF-CEM sublines to the novel antifolates ZD9331, GW1843, AG2034, PT523 and edatrexate, which use the reduced folate carrier (
RFC)
as their main cellular uptake route and that target different folate-dependent enzymes. Antifolate-resistant sublines established by stepwise and single-step selections displayed up to 2135-fold resistance to the selection drug, and up to 2323-fold cross-resistance to various hydrophilic antifolates. In contrast, these sublines were up to 17- and 20-fold hypersensitive to the lipophilic antifolates AG377 and trimetrexate, respectively. The total reduced folate pool of these antifolate-resistant sublines shrunk by 87-96%, resulting in up to 42-fold increased folic acid growth requirement. These sublines lost 92-97% of parental [(3)H]methotrexate influx rates. Genomic PCR single-strand conformational polymorphism analysis and sequencing revealed that most of these drug-resistant sublines harboured RFC mutations that surprisingly clustered in two confined regions in exons 2 and 3. The majority of these mutations resulted in frame-shift and/or premature translation termination and lack of RFC protein expression. The remaining mutations involved single amino acid substitutions predominantly residing in the first transmembrane domain (TMD1). Some RFC-inactivating mutations emerged during the early stages of antifolate selection and were stably retained during further drug selection. Furthermore, some sublines displayed a markedly decreased or abolished RFC mRNA and/or protein expression. This constitutes the first demonstration of clustering of multiple human RFC mutations in TMD1, thereby suggesting that it plays a functional role in folate/antifolate binding and/or translocation. This is the first molecular characterization of human RFC-associated modalities of resistance to various novel antifolates in multiple
leukaemia
sublines.
...
PMID:Resistance to multiple novel antifolates is mediated via defective drug transport resulting from clustered mutations in the reduced folate carrier gene in human leukaemia cell lines. 1213 89
Resistance to the antifolate methotrexate (MTX) can cause treatment failure in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). This may result from defective MTX accumulation due to alterations in the
human reduced folate carrier
(hRFC) gene. We have identified an hRFC gene point mutation in a transport-defective CCRF-CEM human T-ALL cell line resulting in a lysine to glutamic acid substitution at codon 45 (E45K), which has been identified in other antifolate-resistant sublines (JBC 273:30 189, 1998; JBC 275:30 855, 2000). To characterize the role of this mutation in MTX resistance, transfection experiments were performed using hRFC-null CCRF-CEM cells. E45K transfectants demonstrated an initial rate of MTX influx that was approximately 0.5-fold that of CCRF-CEM cells, despite marked protein overexpression. Cytotoxicity studies revealed partial reversal of MTX and raltitrexed resistance in E45K transfectants, while trimetrexate resistance was significantly increased. Kinetic analysis indicated only minor differences in MTX kinetics between wild-type and E45K hRFCs, however, K(i)s for folic acid and 5-formyltetrahydrofolate were markedly reduced for E45K hRFC. This was paralleled by increased folic acid transport and reduced synthesis of MTX polyglutamates. Collectively, the results demonstrate that expression of E45K hRFC leads to increased MTX resistance due to decreased membrane transport and, secondarily, from alterations in binding affinities and transport of folate substrates. However, despite these findings, we could find no evidence of this mutation in 121 childhood ALL samples, suggesting that it does not contribute to clinical MTX resistance in this disease.
Leukemia
2002 Dec
PMID:Role of the E45K-reduced folate carrier gene mutation in methotrexate resistance in human leukemia cells. 1245 42
We studied the molecular basis of the up to 46-fold increased accumulation of folates and methotrexate (MTX) in human
leukemia
CEM-7A cells established by gradual deprivation of leucovorin (LCV). CEM-7A cells consequently exhibited 10- and 68-fold decreased LCV and folic acid growth requirements and 23-25-fold hypersensitivity to MTX and edatrexate. Although CEM-7A cells displayed a 74-86-fold increase in the reduced folate carrier (
RFC)
-mediated influx of LCV and MTX, RFC overexpression per se cannot induce a prominently increased folate/MTX accumulation because RFC functions as a nonconcentrative anion exchanger. We therefore explored the possibility that folate efflux activity mediated by members of the multidrug resistance protein (MRP) family was impaired in CEM-7A cells. Parental CEM cells expressed substantial levels of MRP1, MRP4, poor MRP5 levels, whereas MRP2, MRP3 and breast cancer resistance protein were undetectable. In contrast, CEM-7A cells lost 95% of MRP1 levels while retaining parental expression of MRP4 and MRP5. Consequently, CEM-7A cells displayed a 5-fold decrease in the [(3)H]folic acid efflux rate constant, which was identical to that obtained with parental CEM cells, when their folic acid efflux was blocked (78%) with probenecid. Furthermore, when compared with parental CEM, CEM-7A cells accumulated 2-fold more calcein fluorescence. Treatment of parental cells with the MRP1 efflux inhibitors MK571 and probenecid resulted in a 60-100% increase in calcein fluorescence. In contrast, these inhibitors failed to alter the calcein fluorescence in CEM-7A cells, which markedly lost MRP1 expression. Replenishment of LCV in the growth medium of CEM-7A cells resulted in resumption of normal MRP1 expression. These results establish for the first time that MRP1 is the primary folate efflux route in CEM
leukemia
cells and that the loss of folate efflux activity is an efficient means of markedly augmenting cellular folate pools. These findings suggest a functional role for MRP1 in the maintenance of cellular folate homeostasis.
...
PMID:Loss of multidrug resistance protein 1 expression and folate efflux activity results in a highly concentrative folate transport in human leukemia cells. 1248 26
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