Potent Killing of Paclitaxel- and Doxorubicin-resistant Breast Cancer Cells by Calphostin C Accompanied by Cytoplasmic Vacuolization
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
- Vol. 82 (2) , 125-141
- https://doi.org/10.1023/b:brea.0000003969.21267.81
Abstract
Drug resistance is a major impediment to the successful treatment of breast cancer using chemotherapy. The photoactivatable drug calphostin C has shown promise in killing select drug-resistant tumor cells lines in vitro. To assess the effectiveness of this agent in killing doxorubicin- or paclitaxel-resistant breast tumor cells and to explore its mode of action, MCF-7 cells were exposed to increasing concentrations of either doxorubicin or paclitaxel until maximum resistance was obtained. This resulted in the creation of isogenic drug-resistant MCF-7TAX and MCF-7DOX cell lines, which were approximately 50- and 65-fold resistant to paclitaxel and doxorubicin, respectively. Interestingly, calphostin C was able to kill MCF-7TAX cells as efficiently as wildtype MCF-7 cells (IC50s were 9.2 and 13.2 nM, respectively), while MCF-7DOX cells required a 5-fold higher concentration of calphostin C to achieve the same killing (IC50 = 64.2 nM). Consistent with their known mechanisms of action, paclitaxel killed tumor cells by inducing mitotic arrest and cell multinucleation, while doxorubicin induced plasma membrane blebbing and decreased nuclear staining with propidium iodide. In contrast, cytoplasmic vacuolization accompanied cell killing by calphostin C in these cell lines, without the induction of caspase-8 or PARP cleavage or the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. Calphostin C had little effect on the uptake of either paclitaxel or doxorubicin by the cells. Taken together, the above data suggests that calphostin C is able to potently kill drug-resistant breast tumor cells through a mechanism that may involve the induction of cytoplasmic vacuolization, without activation of typical apoptotic pathways. Consequently, calphostin C may prove useful clinically to combat tumor growth in breast cancer patients whose tumors have become unresponsive to anthracyclines or taxanes, particularly in association with photodynamic therapy.Keywords
This publication has 76 references indexed in Scilit:
- Induction of multidrug resistance in MOLT-4 cells by anticancer agents is closely related to increased expression of functional P-glycoprotein and MDR1 mRNACancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology, 2002
- Multidrug resistance in cancer: role of ATP–dependent transportersNature Reviews Cancer, 2002
- Molecular and pharmacological strategies to overcome multidrug resistanceExpert Review of Anticancer Therapy, 2001
- ABC drug transporters: hereditary polymorphisms and pharmacological impact in MDR1, MRP1 and MRP2Pharmacogenomics, 2001
- Multidrug resistance transporters and modulationCurrent Opinion in Oncology, 2000
- BIOCHEMICAL, CELLULAR, AND PHARMACOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE MULTIDRUG TRANSPORTERAnnual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1999
- Atypical Multidrug Resistance: Breast Cancer Resistance Protein Messenger RNA Expression in Mitoxantrone-Selected Cell LinesJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1999
- P-glycoprotein—A mediator of multidrug resistance in tumour cellsEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1996
- The drug resistance-related protein LRP is the human major vault proteinNature Medicine, 1995
- Overexpression of a Transporter Gene in a Multidrug-Resistant Human Lung Cancer Cell LineScience, 1992