The multidrug transporter: rapid modulation of efflux activity monitored in single cells by the morphologic effects of vinblastine and daunomycinPL Konen, SJ Currier, AV Rutherford, MM Gottesman, I Pastan and MC Willingham Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892. Double-label fluorescence microscopy was used to demonstrate the efflux activity of the multidrug transporter in single cultured cells. NIH3T3 cells expressing a transfected MDR1 gene (NIH3T3-MDR) were treated with vinblastine or daunomycin. The accumulation of vinblastine was monitored by examining the morphology of tubulin in cells, using immunofluorescence. Overnight treatment of drug-sensitive cells caused disassembly of microtubules and formation of paracrystals; the absence of vinblastine effects was evident by the presence of intact microtubules. Daunomycin accumulation was detected in nuclei using the inherent fluorescence of the drug with rhodamine epifluorescence microscopy. Drug efflux in multidrug-resistant cells was inhibited with verapamil. When multidrug-resistant cells were treated overnight in vinblastine, an effect of 0.5 microM vinblastine on microtubules was seen only in the presence of verapamil. Similarly, when cells were treated with daunomycin, this drug accumulated in nuclei only when verapamil was present. When cells incubated with vinblastine and verapamil were washed free of drugs, they did not accumulate daunomycin in a subsequent incubation, indicating that the multidrug transporter was still active; this occurred even though the morphologic effects of vinblastine persisted. Cells incubated with vinblastine alone showed an immediate inhibition of efflux activity when verapamil was subsequently added with daunomycin. These results show that the efflux activity of the multidrug transporter can be rapidly manipulated by agents such as verapamil, despite a prior history of drug treatment, and that the effects of inhibition of the transporter are rapidly reversible.
Volume 37,
Issue 7,
pp. 1141-1145,
07/01/1989
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
M. S. McGrath, M. G. Rosenblum, M. R. Philips, and D. A. Scheinberg Immunotoxin Resistance in Multidrug Resistant Cells Cancer Res., January 1, 2003; 63(1): 72 - 79. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. A. McAleer, M. A. Breen, N. L. White, and N. Matthews pABC11 (Also Known as MOAT-C and MRP5), a Member of the ABC Family of Proteins, Has Anion Transporter Activity but Does Not Confer Multidrug Resistance When Overexpressed in Human Embryonic Kidney 293 Cells J. Biol. Chem., August 13, 1999; 274(33): 23541 - 23548. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| Guidelines | Subscriptions | About | exPRESS - Current - Archive | Business Information | Contact |