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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A human
colon cancer
cell line with acquired multidrug resistance (MDR) was assayed for the intracellular GSH level and the activity of GSH-S-transferase (GST), which catalyzes the conjugation reaction of electrophilic drugs with GSH. The GSH level and GST activity (as measured with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene) were elevated in the resistant cells by 1.7-fold and 2-fold, respectively. This elevated catalytic activity of the resistant cells was reflected in a 2-fold increase in GST-pi mRNA, which was not the result of gene amplification. In addition, buthionine sulfoximine, a specific inhibitor of GSH synthesis, significantly increased Adriamycin sensitivity in both the MDR and the parental cells, affecting the former more than the latter. The effects seen with buthionine sulfoximine were not seen with puromycin and actinomycin D. A dramatic overexpression of mdr1, a
P-glycoprotein
gene responsible for the MDR phenotype, was also observed in the MDR cells. In contrast, none of these products (i.e., mdr
P-glycoprotein
, GSH level, total GST activity, GST-pi gene copy, and GST-pi mRNA level) was elevated in HeLa cells resistant to cisplatin and some alkylating agents, supporting the notion that the acquisition of cisplatin resistance differs from the mechanism of MDR. These results indicate that the intrinsic GSH level and GST-pi activity affect anthracycline resistance per se and not MDR in the human
colon cancer
cells.
...
PMID:Overexpression of glutathione S-transferase and elevation of thiol pools in a multidrug-resistant human colon cancer cell line. 134 33
Feasibility of immunohistochemical staining of
P-glycoprotein
for the prediction of doxorubicin resistance in gastrointestinal cancers was examined. Among 10 cancer cell lines which consist of two gastric cancer cell lines and eight
colon cancer
cell lines, seven cell lines were stained positively by the monoclonal antibody to
P-glycoprotein
, C219. In consequence of the evaluation on the effect of doxorubicin on these tumour cells by means of succinic dehydrogenase inhibition test (SDI test), zero out of seven cell lines stained positively by C219 was sensitive to doxorubicin, but two out of three cell lines stained negatively were sensitive. Among 23 fresh surgical specimens of gastrointestinal cancers which consisted of 15 gastric cancers and eight colon cancers, seven tumour tissues were stained positively by C219. All
P-glycoprotein
positive tumours were resistant to doxorubicin. On the other hand, four of 16
P-glycoprotein
tumours were sensitive to doxorubicin. These data indicate that positively stained cancer cells by C219 are resistant to doxorubicin.
...
PMID:Prediction of doxorubicin resistance in gastrointestinal cancer by P-glycoprotein staining. 135 49
In many cell systems, resistance to cytotoxic drugs is acquired by the amplification and/or overexpression of the multidrug resistance (mdr) gene, which codes for the glycoprotein, p170 (
P-glycoprotein
). Moreover, in a variety of malignant tumours there is increasing evidence of the relationship between the DNA ploidy pattern of patients and their prognosis. In this study we aimed to evaluate these two potential indicators of constitutive drug resistance in human colorectal tumours. We employed a method to quantify simultaneously, on a per cell basis, mdr gene expression (using the C219 monoclonal antibody for
P-glycoprotein
) and nuclear DNA content with high-resolution bivariate flow cytometry. The study was performed on a human colon-carcinoma-derived cell line (LoVo) and its doxorubicin-resistant variant (LoVo/Dx) and on tumour samples and adjacent normal mucosa from 35 untreated patients with
colon cancer
. The
P-glycoprotein
was found in both LoVo and LoVo/Dx cells with levels slightly lower in the parental than in the resistant subline (P, NS). A multi-drug-resistant specific probe for mRNA expression and Western blot assay confirmed the specificity of p170 expression. All of the
colon cancer
with unimodal diploid DNA distribution and all the normal colonic mucosa samples showed
P-glycoprotein
expression, without a statistically significant difference in median values between tumours and normal samples. Tumours with bimodal DNA distribution showed median values of
P-glycoprotein
expression of their hyperdiploid cell clones significantly higher than those of their diploid clones and of the tumours with unimodal DNA distribution (P less than 0.005). Our results show the feasibility of bivariate flow-cytometric analysis of
P-glycoprotein
expression and DNA content on clinical material and support the hypothesis that the MDR phenotype and DNA ploidy together may influence the biological behaviour of
colon cancer
in vivo.
...
PMID:Flow cytometric analysis of multidrug-resistance-associated antigen (P-glycoprotein) and DNA ploidy in human colon cancer. 135 83
P-glycoprotein
mediates classic multidrug resistance by functioning as an efflux pump that excretes lipophilic chemotherapeutic drugs from cancer cells. We now report an association of
P-glycoprotein
in colon carcinomas with another tumor property, i.e., enhancement of local tumor aggressiveness.
P-glycoprotein
was detected with monoclonal antibody immunohistochemistry in 65 of 95 primary colon adenocarcinomas, which were stage B1 or greater. In all but 1 of the 95 cases, solitary invading carcinoma cells were present at the leading edge of the tumor. This subpopulation of invasive carcinoma cells expressed
P-glycoprotein
(P-Gp+) in 47 of the 95 surgically resected colon specimens. Cases were grouped on the basis of the presence (Group 1, 47 cases) or absence (Group 2, 48 cases) of P-Gp+ invasive carcinoma cells. There was a significantly greater incidence of vessel invasion (P less than 0.001) and lymph node metastases (P less than 0.01) in Group 1 cases. Groups 1 and 2 did not differ with respect to tumor size, depth of invasion of the bowel wall, histological grade, maximum tumor size, mitotic index, mucin production, or presence of perineural invasion (P greater than 0.1). Our findings indicate that P-Gp+ invasive
colon cancer
cells may have an increased potential for dissemination, suggesting that
P-glycoprotein
may influence cell behavior.
...
PMID:Relationship of the expression of the multidrug resistance gene product (P-glycoprotein) in human colon carcinoma to local tumor aggressiveness and lymph node metastasis. 167 39
The effectiveness of liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin in overcoming multidrug resistance was studied in various human
colon cancer
cells. Colon-cancer cell lines SW403, HT29, SW620, and SW620/R overexpressed
P-glycoprotein
as determined by immunoflow cytometry, thereby confirming the presence of the multidrug-resistant phenotype. Important differences were observed in the cytotoxicity of free doxorubicin as represented by IC50 values of 0.168, 0.058, 0.023, and 9.83 microM for SW403, HT29, SW620, and SW620/R, respectively. Liposomally encapsulated doxorubicin provided an IC50 that was 1.4 times lower than that of the free drug in the doxorubicin-resistant SW 620/R cell line, whereas no difference was evident in the sensitive parental SW620 cells. In addition, liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin exhibited 1.31- and 2.33-fold cytotoxicity to HT-29 and SW403 cells, respectively. The intracellular drug accumulation in SW620/R cells was enhanced by liposomally encapsulated doxorubicin, whereas it was reduced in all other cell lines as compared with that of free drug. The colon-cancer cell lines demonstrated different degrees of doxorubicin-induced DNA strand breakage that correlated with their sensitivities to drug-induced cytotoxicity. However, no difference was observed between DNA breakage caused by the free drug and that induced by liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin in any of the cell lines. The results suggest that the enhanced cytotoxicity of liposomal doxorubicin to
colon cancer
cells was due to some secondary non-DNA target. However, liposomally encapsulated doxorubicin appears to be effective in diminishing the multidrug-resistant phenotype and may have clinical applications.
...
PMID:Sensitization of multidrug-resistant colon cancer cells to doxorubicin encapsulated in liposomes. 167 95
One strategy to overcome multidrug resistance in neoplasia is to inhibit the gp170 glycoprotein (relative molecular mass, 170,000) that functions as a plasma membrane, energy-dependent, drug-efflux pump. The human
colon cancer
cell line HT-29, which grows as an ascitic tumor in athymic NCr-nu/nu nude mice, was made multidrug resistant by infection with an MDR1 (also known as PGY1) retrovirus. Referred to as HT-29mdr1, it was used to study reversal of drug resistance in vivo by the anti-
P-glycoprotein
monoclonal antibody MRK-16. Flow cytometry and radioimmunoassay demonstrated a marked increase in MRK-16 reactivity on HT-29mdr1 cells as compared with its reactivity on the parental, uninfected cell line (HT-29par). The 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50) of vincristine on HT-29par and HT-29mdr1 cells were 2.5 and 15 ng/mL, respectively. The MRK-16 monoclonal antibody did not affect the vincristine sensitivity of the HT-29par cells. Pretreatment of HT-29mdr1 cells with 10 micrograms/mL MRK-16 in tissue culture partially restored the vincristine sensitivity (IC50 = 7 ng/mL). This modulation of vincristine sensitivity by MRK-16 was then tested in vivo. The median survival times of mice given intraperitoneal transplants of 5 x 10(6) HT-29par or HT-29mdr1 were 37 and 39 days, respectively. Treatment of mice with 1 mg/kg vincristine weekly for 3 weeks, beginning 10 days after tumor injection, resulted in a significant increase in the median survival time of the HT-29par tumor-bearing mice (68 days, P less than .0001), but it had no effect on the HT-29mdr1 tumor-bearing mice. However, treatment of mice bearing the HT-29mdr1 tumor with MRK-16 before vincristine therapy reversed the resistance to the drug (median survival time = 64 days, P less than .0001). The MRK-16 monoclonal antibody alone had no effect on the median survival time of mice given an injection of either HT-29par or HT-29mdr1 cells. These results suggest that strategies employing monoclonal antibody against gp170 may be clinically useful to reverse multidrug resistance.
...
PMID:Reversal of drug resistance in a human colon cancer xenograft expressing MDR1 complementary DNA by in vivo administration of MRK-16 monoclonal antibody. 168 Nov 10
The human
P-glycoprotein
gene family contains the mdr1 and the mdr3 gene. The mdr1
P-glycoprotein
is over-expressed in multidrug resistant (MDR) tumor cells and is believed to play a role in the elimination of certain cytotoxic drugs used in the chemotherapy of cancer. The mdr3 gene has not been found to be amplified or over-expressed in MDR cells. In this study, gene-specific mdr gene probes were developed for the detection of the gene and the total mRNA level. Southern and Northern hybridization analyses showed that the mdr genes and the mRNA levels were increased 30--40-fold in a MDR human
colon cancer
cell line. In addition, this MDR cell line had an altered growth rate and morphology and detectable double minute chromosomes.
...
PMID:Co-amplification and over-expression of two mdr genes in a multidrug-resistant human colon carcinoma cell line. 168 62
Four human
colon cancer
cell lines (SW620, LS 180, DLD-I, and HCT-15) and sub-lines isolated in vitro by selection with Adriamycin were studied for reversal of intrinsic and acquired Adriamycin resistance, using buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) to deplete cellular glutathione alone and in combination with the
P-glycoprotein
antagonist verapamil. GSH levels varied among the parental cell lines but did not increase with resistance. In the parental SW620, DLD-I and HCT-15 and their drug-resistant derivatives, there was no relation between the effect of the glutathione-depleting agent BSO, the mRNA expression of both selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione S-transferase pi (GST pi), bulk glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity, and the degree of resistance. However, in LS 180 and its derivative sub-lines, which do not principally rely on
P-glycoprotein
(Pgp) for Adriamycin resistance, treatment with BSO demonstrated a relatively diminished GSH depletion and enhanced recovery. In comparison with the other acquired cell lines, BSO specifically reversed acquired resistance in the LS 180 Adriamycin-resistant subline (LS 180 Ad150) after short-term drug exposure. Furthermore, the LS 180 Ad150 cells demonstrated an increase in both GPx and GST pi mRNA expression. These observations suggest that glutathione-mediated detoxification of Adriamycin may play a role in the resistance of this sub-line. Verapamil enhanced Adriamycin cytotoxicity 1.2- to 12-fold in the intrinsically resistant cells and as much as 15-fold in cell lines with acquired resistance. Combination of BSO with verapamil resulted in additive, but not synergistic, reversal of resistance. The results underscore the complex nature of Adriamycin resistance, and suggest a role for drug-resistance-modulating agents in the treatment of colon carcinoma.
...
PMID:Contribution of glutathione and glutathione-dependent enzymes in the reversal of adriamycin resistance in colon carcinoma cell lines. 168 79
Four human
colon cancer
cell lines (SW620, LS 180, DLD-I, and HCT-15) and Adriamycin-resistant sub-lines with varying degrees of
P-glycoprotein
expression were studied to evaluate the reversibility of Adriamycin resistance in human
colon cancer
. Two groups of cell lines were studied. In the first, including a series of Adriamycin-resistant SW620 and DLD-I sub-lines, and in parental HCT-15 cells,
P-glycoprotein
has a major role in Adriamycin resistance, as evidenced by a correlation between Adriamycin resistance, expression of the multidrug-resistance gene mdr-I and its product,
P-glycoprotein
(Pgp), decreased drug accumulation and reversibility by verapamil. In these cell lines, increasing doses of verapamil are required to fully reverse increasing levels of resistance. In the second group, including parental SW620, DLD-I and LS 180 cells and Adriamycin-selected LS 180 sub-lines,
P-glycoprotein
does not have a major role in Adriamycin resistance. There was correlation between the schedule dependence of Adriamycin cytotoxicity and the role of
P-glycoprotein
in modulating resistance. In the cell lines in which
P-glycoprotein
was a major determinant of Adriamycin resistance, the drug exposure (defined as the product of the concentration and the time of treatment) needed to achieve a given percent cell kill was reduced as much as 9-fold when cells were treated for 7 days as compared with 3 hr. By comparison, in cell lines in which
P-glycoprotein
played a lesser role, the drug exposure necessary to achieve a given percent kill increased under conditions of continuous treatment. In some human colon carcinoma cell lines Pgp appears to play a significant role in resistance to Adriamycin, and this can be overcome by the use of competitive inhibitors of Pgp. The increased sensitivity with continuous treatment observed in cell lines with
P-glycoprotein
-mediated resistance suggests that administration of drugs by continuous infusion may be valuable in reversing clinical drug resistance mediated predominantly by
P-glycoprotein
.
...
PMID:P-glycoprotein expression and schedule dependence of adriamycin cytotoxicity in human colon carcinoma cell lines. 168 80
The expression of MDR1 gene was investigated in human solid tumors with respect to adriamycin resistance. Forty fresh human surgical specimens were analyzed by RNA dot blot assay for their expression of the human MDR1 gene and by immunohistological staining using a monoclonal antibody against
P-glycoprotein
(MDR1 gene product). The MDR1 mRNA level was increased in 11 cases of 40 cancer patients, including three rectal cancers, two breast cancers, two gastric cancers, one
colon cancer
, one renal cell carcinoma, one gall bladder cancer and one malignant lymphoma of stomach. However, considerable variation of the MDR1 mRNA level was noted among cancers of a specific type. Immunohistochemical studies with the monoclonal antibody were shown to be positive in 18 tumors. In all tumors tested, the MDR1 mRNA level and the immunohistochemical analysis showed a significant correlation. However, two of five tumors which resisted adriamycin treatment were found to be negative in MDR1 transcript, but positive in immunohistological analysis. These results indicate that immunohistochemical analysis would be more sensitive for detecting
P-glycoprotein
-expression, and that resistance to adriamycin, being multifactorial, can be associated at least, in part with the increased amount of MDR1 gene product.
...
PMID:Expression of the multidrug resistance gene in human tumors. 198 Sep 15
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