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Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.

The multidrug resistance (MDR) phenotype is presumed to be mostly dependent on changes in the resistant cell plasma membrane, notably the emergence of a 170 kDa glycoprotein called P-glycoprotein, which facilitate increased drug efflux. We have previously demonstrated that ATP-enhanced binding of vi...

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Autores principales: Sehested, M., Jensen, P. B., Skovsgaard, T., Bindslev, N., Demant, E. J., Friche, E., Vindeløv, L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 1989
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2247270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2605092
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author Sehested, M.
Jensen, P. B.
Skovsgaard, T.
Bindslev, N.
Demant, E. J.
Friche, E.
Vindeløv, L.
author_facet Sehested, M.
Jensen, P. B.
Skovsgaard, T.
Bindslev, N.
Demant, E. J.
Friche, E.
Vindeløv, L.
author_sort Sehested, M.
collection PubMed
description The multidrug resistance (MDR) phenotype is presumed to be mostly dependent on changes in the resistant cell plasma membrane, notably the emergence of a 170 kDa glycoprotein called P-glycoprotein, which facilitate increased drug efflux. We have previously demonstrated that ATP-enhanced binding of vincristine (VCR) to plasma membrane vesicles is much greater in MDR than in wild type cells. The present study has shown that VCR binding to MDR Ehrlich ascites tumour cell plasma membrane vesicles is inhibited 50% most efficiently by quinidine (0.5 microM) followed by verapamil (4.1 microM) and trifluoperazine (23.2 microM). This is the reverse order of the effect on whole cells where a ranking of efficiency in terms of enhancement of VCR accumulation, inhibition of VCR efflux, DNA perturbation and modulation of resistance in a clonogenic assay, was trifluoperazine greater than or equal to verapamil much greater than quinidine. The detergent Tween 80 inhibited VCR binding to plasma membrane vesicles at 0.001% v/v which agreed with the level which modulated resistance and increased VCR accumulation in whole cells. No effect was observed on daunorubicin binding to MDR plasma membrane vesicles after incubation with either Tween 80 (up to 0.1% v/v) or verapamil (up to 25 microM). We conclude that the effect of a modulating drug in reversing resistance to VCR correlates with its ability to raise intracellular VCR levels but not with its capability to inhibit VCR binding to the plasma membrane. Thus, enhancement of VCR accumulation in MDR cells is hardly solely due to competition for a drug binding site on P-glycoprotein. Furthermore, the lack of a demonstrable effect on daunorubicin binding to the plasma membrane by modulators points to transport mechanisms which do not utilise specific drug binding to the plasma membrane.
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spelling pubmed-22472702009-09-10 Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators. Sehested, M. Jensen, P. B. Skovsgaard, T. Bindslev, N. Demant, E. J. Friche, E. Vindeløv, L. Br J Cancer Research Article The multidrug resistance (MDR) phenotype is presumed to be mostly dependent on changes in the resistant cell plasma membrane, notably the emergence of a 170 kDa glycoprotein called P-glycoprotein, which facilitate increased drug efflux. We have previously demonstrated that ATP-enhanced binding of vincristine (VCR) to plasma membrane vesicles is much greater in MDR than in wild type cells. The present study has shown that VCR binding to MDR Ehrlich ascites tumour cell plasma membrane vesicles is inhibited 50% most efficiently by quinidine (0.5 microM) followed by verapamil (4.1 microM) and trifluoperazine (23.2 microM). This is the reverse order of the effect on whole cells where a ranking of efficiency in terms of enhancement of VCR accumulation, inhibition of VCR efflux, DNA perturbation and modulation of resistance in a clonogenic assay, was trifluoperazine greater than or equal to verapamil much greater than quinidine. The detergent Tween 80 inhibited VCR binding to plasma membrane vesicles at 0.001% v/v which agreed with the level which modulated resistance and increased VCR accumulation in whole cells. No effect was observed on daunorubicin binding to MDR plasma membrane vesicles after incubation with either Tween 80 (up to 0.1% v/v) or verapamil (up to 25 microM). We conclude that the effect of a modulating drug in reversing resistance to VCR correlates with its ability to raise intracellular VCR levels but not with its capability to inhibit VCR binding to the plasma membrane. Thus, enhancement of VCR accumulation in MDR cells is hardly solely due to competition for a drug binding site on P-glycoprotein. Furthermore, the lack of a demonstrable effect on daunorubicin binding to the plasma membrane by modulators points to transport mechanisms which do not utilise specific drug binding to the plasma membrane. Nature Publishing Group 1989-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2247270/ /pubmed/2605092 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sehested, M.
Jensen, P. B.
Skovsgaard, T.
Bindslev, N.
Demant, E. J.
Friche, E.
Vindeløv, L.
Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title_full Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title_fullStr Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title_full_unstemmed Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title_short Inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant Ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
title_sort inhibition of vincristine binding to plasma membrane vesicles from daunorubicin-resistant ehrlich ascites cells by multidrug resistance modulators.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2247270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2605092
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