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Case Reports
. 1993;31(6):431-41.
doi: 10.1007/BF00685031.

MDR-1 gene expression, anthracycline retention and cytotoxicity in human lung-tumor cells from refractory patients

Affiliations
Case Reports

MDR-1 gene expression, anthracycline retention and cytotoxicity in human lung-tumor cells from refractory patients

C Ramachandran et al. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 1993.

Abstract

Lung-tumor cells from pleural effusion of four refractory patients and in cell lines established from them were analyzed for anthracycline retention, cytotoxicity, and MDR-1 gene and P-glycoprotein expression. Murine leukemic P388 and doxorubicin-resistant P388/R84 lines were used as controls. The 50% growth-inhibitory concentration (IC50) for doxorubicin among lung-tumor lines varied from 0.16 to 0.31 microM in soft agar. Heterogeneity in doxorubicin or daunorubicin retention and response to the efflux-blocking action of 25 microM prochlorperazine was noted in pleural effusion of FCCL-1, -4, and -8. Among the cell lines established, an efflux-blocking effect in a subpopulation was noticed only in FCCL-1 and -4. Although the MDR-1 gene was present in all cell lines, including P388, its expression was pronounced only in P388/R84 and FCCL-1. In situ hybridization of antisense RNA probe to tumor cells showed high heterogeneity for MDR-1 message in the human lung-tumor cells as compared with the murine cells. Northern and slot blot hybridization confirmed in situ hybridization in lines with high levels of MDR-1 expression. The synthesis of MDR-1 mRNA and P-glycoprotein in tumor lines was correlated. The results suggest that because of extensive tumor-cell heterogeneity in human tumors, monitoring of MDR expression by in situ hybridization, quantitation of P-glycoprotein content by laser flow cytometry (and/or immunohistochemical methods), and drug efflux (by laser flow cytometry) may be the best ways to monitor multidrug resistance in human tumors.

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