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Comparative Study
. 1996 May 1;77(9):1797-808.
doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0142(19960501)77:9<1797::AID-CNCR7>3.0.CO;2-9.

Mechanisms of resistance of human small cell lung cancer lines selected in VP-16 and cisplatin

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Mechanisms of resistance of human small cell lung cancer lines selected in VP-16 and cisplatin

N Jain et al. Cancer. .

Abstract

Background: The combination of VP-16 and cisplatin is one of the most active regimens available for the treatment of small cell lung cancer (SCLC), however, most tumors eventually become resistant to these drugs.

Methods: To investigate the problem of resistance to VP-16 and cisplatin in patients with SCLC, we established two resistant sublines from the drug sensitive human SCLC line, NCI-H209, by in vitro selection in VP-16 and cisplatin.

Results: The VP-16-selected cell line, H209/VP, was more than 100-fold resistant to VP-16, and displayed cross-resistance to VM-26 and other topoisomerase II interactive drugs, but not to vinca alkaloids. There was no difference in accumulation of VP-16 in H209/VP compared with its parent cell line. The level of topoisomerase II-alpha was reduced to 8% of that in the parent cell line, and there was an altered form of this enzyme with a molecular weight of 160 kilodaltons (kDa), in addition to the normal 170 kDa protein. The cisplatin-selected cell line, H209/CP, was 11.5-fold resistant to cisplatin, with only a low level of cross-resistance to other platinum compounds including carboplatin, tetraplatin, iproplatin, and lobaplatin. This line was highly cross-resistant to vinca alkaloids, but not to anthracyclines or epipodophyllotoxins. The H209/CP cell line was not resistant to cadium chloride, suggesting that alterations in metallothionein are unlikely to be a cause of resistance. Although glutathione (GSH) levels were increased nearly 2-fold in H209/CP, there was no difference in levels of the GSH-related enzymes glutathione-S-transferase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase, compared with the parent line. The H209/CP line had a 1.4-fold elevation of topoisomerase II-alpha. The accumulation of cisplatin was reduced in this cell line, and there were fewer DNA-interstrand cross links formed in the presence of cisplatin in H209/CP, compared with the parent line. Neither H209/VP nor H209/CP expressed MDR1, the gene for P-glycoprotein. The MRP gene was expressed at a slightly higher level in the H209/VP cell line, but there was no significant increase in expression of this gene in the H209/CP cell line.

Conclusions: The resistance of the H209/VP cell line is associated with an alteration of topoisomerase II-alpha, whereas the resistance in the H209/CP line is associated with reduced drug accumulation.

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