Abstract

Human RFC1 (hRFC1) transfected in transport-deficient methotrexate MTX RZR-75-1 human breast carcinoma cells (MTX RZR-75/RFC) were used to investigate the impact of hRFC1 overexpression on influx and concentrative transport of methotrexate (MTX). Eight-fold overexpression of hRFC1, as determined by northern analysis, resulted in a 4-fold increase in MTX influx accompanied by a 2.4-fold increase in the steady-state level of free drug as compared with wild-type ZR-75-1 cells when the extracellular MTX level was 0.5 μM. When extracellular MTX was increased to 10 μM, the increase in influx equaled the increase in the transmembrane chemical gradient for MTX in the transfectant relative to wild-type cells. By 50 min, ∼16–20 and 25% of the intracellular 3H represented MTX polyglutamates by HPLC analysis at [MTX] e = 0.5 and 10 μM in wild-type and transfected cells, respectively. Overexpression of hRFC1 enhanced sensitivity to MTX in MTX RZR-75-1 cells by more than 250-fold. The data indicate that overexpression of hRFC1 in human cells results in comparable increases in influx and transmembrane gradients. This is different from what was reported when mouse RFC1 was transfected into murine leukemia cells, resulting in large, more symmetrical increases in the MTX bidirectional transport kinetics with a much smaller change in steady-state levels. The changes in the human cells transfected with hRFC1 however, were similar to what has been observed by other investigators when RFC1 expression is increased by low folate selective pressure.

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