» Articles » PMID: 7923550

Reverse Transformation of Multidrug-resistant Cells

Overview
Specialty Oncology
Date 1994 Jun 1
PMID 7923550
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Spontaneously transformed Chinese hamster lung cells with high levels of resistance (approximately 100-fold to 70,000-fold) to actinomycin D, daunorubicin, or vincristine exhibit morphology and growth patterns characteristic of normal cells in vitro and reduced tumorigenicity in vivo. These reverse transformed, multidrug-resistant cells amplify and highly overexpress one or more genes encoding P-glycoprotein. Similarly, hydrocarbon-induced mouse sarcoma cells selected with actinomycin D, vincristine, or ethidium bromide developed high levels of resistance associated with reduced drug accumulation and suppression of malignancy. To determine whether human tumor cells would undergo similar changes and whether reverse transformation reflected an altered state of differentiation, nine multidrug-resistant sublines were selected with four agents from human neuroblastoma cells with well defined pathways of differentiation. Those five with resistance levels above about 125-fold showed a reduced tumor frequency as compared to control cells. All resistant sublines showed altered differentiation. The changes in transformation phenotype appear to be intrinsic and not the result of altered immunogenicity. Two additional consequences of high level multidrug resistance have been observed: change in ganglioside composition in the Chinese hamster cells, manifested as a block in higher ganglioside biosynthesis and/or a relative increase in GM3, and increase in epidermal growth factor receptor in all three cell systems. A tentative hypothesis links ganglioside and growth factor receptor changes to the change in transformation phenotype. The basis of the reverse transformation phenomenon is not known, but the major alterations in expression of P-glycoprotein, gangliosides, and the epidermal growth factor receptor implicate, in some way, the plasma membrane.

Citing Articles

Proteomics Analysis of Interactions between Drug-Resistant and Drug-Sensitive Cancer Cells: Comparative Studies of Monoculture and Coculture Cell Systems.

Peng Z, Ahsan N, Yang Z J Proteome Res. 2024; 23(7):2608-2618.

PMID: 38907724 PMC: 11425778. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.4c00338.


Metabolomics studies of cell-cell interactions using single cell mass spectrometry combined with fluorescence microscopy.

Chen X, Peng Z, Yang Z Chem Sci. 2022; 13(22):6687-6695.

PMID: 35756524 PMC: 9172575. DOI: 10.1039/d2sc02298b.


Multidrug Resistance of Cancer Cells and the Vital Role of P-Glycoprotein.

Karthika C, Sureshkumar R, Zehravi M, Akter R, Ali F, Ramproshad S Life (Basel). 2022; 12(6).

PMID: 35743927 PMC: 9227591. DOI: 10.3390/life12060897.


Silencing of the ARK5 gene reverses the drug resistance of multidrug-resistant SGC7901/DDP gastric cancer cells.

Wan H, Liu X, Chen Y, Tang R, Yi B, Liu D PeerJ. 2020; 8:e9560.

PMID: 32844054 PMC: 7416719. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9560.


Cytotoxicity of methanol extracts of , and nine other Cameroonian medicinal plants towards multi-factorial drug-resistant cancer cell lines.

Kuete V, Dzotam J, Voukeng I, Fankam A, Efferth T Springerplus. 2016; 5(1):1666.

PMID: 27730025 PMC: 5039145. DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-3361-4.


References
1.
Schinkel A, Borst P . Multidrug resistance mediated by P-glycoproteins. Semin Cancer Biol. 1991; 2(4):213-26. View

2.
Biedler J, Riehm H, Peterson R, Spengler B . Membrane-mediated drug resistance and phenotypic reversion to normal growth behavior of Chinese hamster cells. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1975; 55(3):671-80. DOI: 10.1093/jnci/55.3.671. View

3.
Kessel D, Botterill V, Wodinsky I . Uptake and retention of daunomycin by mouse leukemic cells as factors in drug response. Cancer Res. 1968; 28(5):938-41. View

4.
Ross R, Bossart E, Spengler B, Biedler J . Multipotent capacity of morphologically intermediate (I-type) human neuroblastoma cells after treatment with differentiation-inducing drugs. Prog Clin Biol Res. 1991; 366:193-201. View

5.
MEYERS M, Merluzzi V, Spengler B, Biedler J . Epidermal growth factor receptor is increased in multidrug-resistant Chinese hamster and mouse tumor cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1986; 83(15):5521-5. PMC: 386319. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.83.15.5521. View