Abstract

Drug resistance is a major setback in cancer treatment, thus models to study its mechanisms are needed. Our work aimed to establish and characterize a resistant cell line from a sensitive acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cell line – HL60 – by treating the sensitive cells with increasing concentrations of doxorubicin. We confirmed (cell viability assays) that the established subline, HL60-CDR, was resistant to doxorubicin for at least 30 days without drug treatment. The HL60-CDR cells were also resistant to three other drugs (cisplatin, etoposide and daunorubicin), exhibiting a multidrug resistant (MDR) profile. We verified (Western Blotting) that the MDR cells do not express drug efflux pumps, nor present altered expression of apoptotic proteins, when compared with the parental cell line. HL60-CDR cells presented alterations in the cell cycle profile, and in the expression levels of proteins involved in DNA repair mechanisms and drug metabolism, when compared with their drug sensitive counterpart. Proteomic analysis revealed that HL60-CDR cells presented an upregulation of proteins involved in oncogenic pathways, such as TSC2, PDPK1, Annexin A2, among others. Overall, we established an AML MDR subline – HL60-CDR – which presents several resistance mechanisms, providing an in vitro model to test new compounds to circumvent MDR in AML.

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