1. Induced Resistance in the Human Non Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NCI-H460) Cell Line In Vitro by Anticancer Drugs
- Author
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Milica Pešić, D. Jankovic, Ivanka Markovic, Ljubisav Rakic, J Markovic, Selma Kanazir, and Sabera Ruzdijic
- Subjects
Curcumin ,Lung Neoplasms ,Paclitaxel ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Biology ,Vinblastine ,Flow cytometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Doxorubicin ,RNA, Messenger ,RNA, Neoplasm ,Etoposide ,Glutathione Transferase ,P-glycoprotein ,Pharmacology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Rhodamines ,Drug Resistance, Multiple ,respiratory tract diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Verapamil ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Cell culture ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Efflux ,Multidrug Resistance-Associated Proteins ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Exposure of human non-small cell lung cancer cells (NCI-H460) to gradually increasing concentrations of doxorubicin resulted in the appearance of a new cell line (NCI-H460/R) that was resistant to doxorubicin (96.2-fold) and cross-resistant to etoposide, paclitaxel, vinblastine and epirubicin. Slight cross-resistance to two MDR-unrelated drugs 8-Cl-cAMP and sulfinosine was observed. Flow cytometry analysis showed that the accumulation of doxorubicin in the resistant cells was 88.4% lower than in the parental cells. Also, verapamil significantly decreased the efflux rate in NCI-H460 and NCI-H460/R cells, whereas curcumin inhibited the efflux in NCI-H460 cells only. Gene expression data confirmed the induction of mdr1 (P-gp), as judged by the observed 15-fold increase in its mRNA concentration in doxorubicin-resistant NCI-H460/R cells. In contrast, mrp1 and lrp expression was unaffected by the doxorubicin resistance. Further work should develop a rationale for a novel treatment of NSCLC with appropriate modulators of resistance aimed at improving the outcome of the acquired drug resistance.
- Published
- 2006
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