Abstract
ABSTRACTMulti-drug resistance due in part to membrane pumps such as P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is a major clinical problem in human cancers. We tested the ability of liposomally-encapsulated daunorubicin (DR) to overcome resistance to this drug. A widely used breast carcinoma cell line originally selected for resistance in doxorubicin (MCF7ADR) was 4-fold resistant to DR compared to the parent MCF7 cells (IC50 79 nM vs. 20 nM). Ovarian carcinoma cells (SKOV3) were made resistant by retroviral transduction of MDR1 cDNA and selection in vinblastine. The resulting SKOV3MGP1 cells were 130-fold resistant to DR compared to parent cells (IC50 5700 nM vs. 44 nM). Small-cell lung carcinoma cells (H69VP) originally selected for resistance to etoposide were 6-fold resistant to DR compared to H69 parent cells (IC50 180 nM vs. 30 nM). In all three cases, encapsulation of DR in liposomes as Daunoxome (Gilead) did not change the IC50 of parent cells relative to free DR. However, liposomal DR overcame resistance in MCF7ADR breast carcinoma cells (IC50 20 nM), SKOV3MGP1 ovarian carcinoma cells (IC50 237 nM) and H69VP small-cell lung carcinoma cells (IC50 27 nM). Empty liposomes did not affect the IC50 for free DR in the three resistant cell lines, nor did empty liposomes affect the IC50 for other drugs that are part of the multi-drug resistance phenotype (etoposide, vincristine) in lung carcinoma cells. These data indicate the possible value of liposomal DR in overcoming Pgp-mediated drug resistance in human cancer.
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