Assessment of multidrug resistance on cell coculture patterns using scanning electrochemical microscopy

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Abstract

The emergence of resistance to multiple unrelated chemotherapeutic drugs impedes the treatment of several cancers. Although the involvement of ATP-binding cassette transporters has long been known, there is no in situ method capable of tracking this transporter- related resistance at the single-cell level without interfering with the cell's environment or metabolism. Here, we demonstrate that scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) can quantitatively and noninvasively track multidrug resistance-related protein 1- dependent multidrug resistance in patterned adenocarcinoma cervical cancer cells. Nonresistant human cancer cells and their multidrug resistant variants are arranged in a side-by-side format using a stencil-based patterning scheme, allowing for precise positioning of target cells underneath the SECM sensor. SECM measurements of the patterned cells, performed with ferrocenemethanol and [Ru(NH3)6]3+ serving as electrochemical indicators, are used to establish a kinetic "map" of constant-height SECM scans, free of topography contributions. The concept underlying the work described herein may help evaluate the effectiveness of treatment administration strategies targeting reduced drug efflux.

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Kuss, S., Polcari, D., Geissler, M., Brassard, D., & Mauzeroll, J. (2013). Assessment of multidrug resistance on cell coculture patterns using scanning electrochemical microscopy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(23), 9249–9254. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1214809110

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