Abstract

Intrinsic and acquired multidrug resistance is an important problem in cancer therapy. Multidrug resistance results from overexpression of the MDR 1 gene, which encodes a drug-efflux pump called P-glycoprotein. We have isolated a 1-kilobase genomic fragment containing the major transcription initiation sites for the human MDR 1 gene. Ribonuclease protection experiments using this fragment indicate that normal human adrenal, colon, and liver cells, the human hepatoma cell line HepG2, and vinblastine-selected human KB multidrug-resistant cells initiate transcription of the MDR 1 gene at the same site within this fragment. The 0.43-kilobase region upstream from the major transcription initiation site linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene showed promoter activity in CV-1 monkey kidney cells and in human KB cells. The putative promoter region has a consensus CAAT box and two GC box-like sequences, but no TATA sequence. This identification and isolation of promoter sequences for the MDR 1 gene will permit studies on how expression of this gene is regulated in normal human tissues and cancers.

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