Abstract
It has been widely stated that cisplatin enters cells by passive diffusion, despite some reports supporting a carrier-mediated mechanism. We have determined the rate of uptake of carboplatin (CBDCA), of cisplatin (CDDP) and of aquated forms, at different values of the extracellular pH, in the small lung-cancer cells GLC4 and GLC4/CDDP, cells resistant to CDDP. The rate of CDDP uptake is about 2-fold lower in resistant cells than in sensitive ones; in ATP-depleted cells this rate is about the same for both cell lines. The rate of CBDCA uptake is about 10-fold lower than that of CDDP and is the same in both cell lines independently of the ATP status of the cells. On the other hand, the rate of uptake of the aquated form of CDDP is approximately 40-fold higher than that of CDDP and is the same in both cell lines, but decreases dramatically in ATP-depleted cells. The plot of the initial rate of uptake of the aquated species as a function of its extracellular concentration shows a tendency to be saturable with k(m)=1.9 mM. In conclusion, our data show that, in sensitive GLC4 cells, passive diffusion of CDDP, probably in its neutral dichloro form, and active uptake of the aquated form contribute to the platinum uptake. The active transport of CDDP involves at least two steps: (1). the hydrolysis of the dichloro species in a deficient Cl(-) space at the level of the plasma membrane, which is the limiting step, and (2). the active transport of the aquated species. In resistant cells, step (1). should be deficient whereas step (2). is the same as in sensitive cells. For CBDCA this mechanism holds; however, step (1). is so low that the active transport does not contribute to the uptake of CBDCA by cells.
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More From: Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry
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