Abstract
Selection protocols were designed to determine whether non-cytotoxic chemomodifiers can influence the evolution of the drug-resistant phenotype. To this end, the human multiple myeloma cell line RPMI 8226 (8226/S) was selected with either doxorubicin, verapamil or doxorubicin plus verapamil. Using this approach low-level multi-drug-resistant (MDR) cell lines were obtained when 8226/S was selected with doxorubicin only or doxorubicin plus verapamil but not with verapamil only. The MDR phenotypes obtained were mechanistically distinct. In doxorubicin only-selected cells (8226/dox4), drug resistance was mediated by over-expression of the MDRI gene and its cognate protein P-glycoprotein. In contrast, the drug resistance seen in the doxorubicin plus verapamil-selected cells was mediated through decreases in topoisomerase II protein levels and catalytic activity and not by P-glycoprotein over-expression. Cells selected with verapamil alone did not become resistant to any of the drugs tested. None of the 3 selected cell lines showed any changes in MRP gene expression when compared with 8226/S. Our results indicate that the inclusion of verapamil during drug selection with doxorubicin influences the drug-resistant phenotype by preventing the selection of MDR I/P-glycoprotein-positive cells.
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CITATION STYLE
Futscher, B. W., Foley, N. E., Gleason-Guzman, M. C., Meltzer, P. S., Sullivan, D. M., & Dalton, W. S. (1996). Verapamil suppresses the emergence of P-glycoprotein-mediated multi-drug resistance. International Journal of Cancer, 66(4), 520–525. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0215(19960516)66:4<520::AID-IJC16>3.0.CO;2-B
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