Abstract

A human lung-cancer PC-9 subline with acquired resistance to vincristine (VCR), a chemotherapeutic agent, was established with incremental increases of the drug. The resistant PC-9 subline (PC-9/VCR) shows a 12-fold increase in resistance to VCR and a unique cross-resistance pattern: high cross-resistance to the potent VCR analogue colchicine (6.9-fold) and vinblastine (2.5-fold); lower cross-resistance to actinomycin D (1.8-fold), cisplatin (1.2-fold) and adriamycin (1.3-fold) and a sensitivity to melphalan and VP-16 which is similar to that of the parental cell line. A reduced accumulation of VCR in the resistant cells was demonstrated. Interestingly, the VCR resistance of the PC-9/VCR cell line was partially reversed by ascorbic acid, and the drug uptake was enhanced. In contrast, ascorbic acid had no effect on drug tolerance and drug accumulation was not observed in either PC-9 parental cells or known multidrug-resistant (MDR) cells, suggesting that VCR resistance in PC-9/VCR cells results essentially from reduced drug accumulation. It is worth noting that, whereas reduced drug accumulation in the PC-9/VCR cells was susceptible to modulation by ascorbic acid, the increased efflux rate characteristic of the resistant cells was not. Further, there was a higher efflux rate in resistant cells than in parental cells. DNA Southern- and RNA Northern-blot hybridization analyses indicate that PC-9/VCR cells do not contain amplified mdr genes or overexpress P-glycoprotein. In addition, the calcium-channel blocker verapamil, which acts as a competitive inhibitor of drug binding and efflux, did not affect the resistant phenotype of PC-9/VCR cells. These findings suggest an ascorbic acid-sensitive drug uptake mechanism which is important in mediating VCR resistance per se in human lung-cancer cells; this differs from the P-glycoprotein-mediated MDR mechanism.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call