Abstract

Effective cancer chemotherapy treatment requires both therapy delivery and retention by malignant cells. Cancer cell overexpression of the multidrug transmembrane transporter gene ABCB1 (MDR1, multi-drug resistance protein 1) thwarts therapy retention, leading to a drug-resistant phenotype. We explored the phenotypic impact of ABCB1 overexpression in normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs) via acute adenoviral delivery and in breast cancer cell lines with stable integration of inducible ABCB1 expression. One hundred sixty-two genes were differentially expressed between ABCB1-expressing and GFP-expressing HMECs, including the gene encoding the cyclooxygenase-2 protein, PTGS2. Several breast cancer cell lines with inducible ABCB1 expression demonstrated sensitivity to the 5-lipoxygenase, cyclooxygenase-1/2 inhibitor tepoxalin in two-dimensional drug response assays, and combination treatment of tepoxalin either with chemotherapies or with histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors improved therapeutic efficacy in these lines. Moreover, selection for the ABCB1-expressing cell population was reduced in three-dimensional co-cultures of ABCB1-expressing and GFP-expressing cells when chemotherapy was given in combination with tepoxalin. Further study is warranted to ascertain the clinical potential of tepoxalin, an FDA-approved therapeutic for use in domesticated mammals, to restore chemosensitivity and improve drug response in patients with ABCB1-overexpressing drug-resistant breast cancers.

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