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  • Title: Induction of broad drug resistance in small cell lung cancer cells and its reversal by paclitaxel.
    Author: Su GM, Davey MW, Davey RA.
    Journal: Int J Cancer; 1998 May 29; 76(5):702-8. PubMed ID: 9610729.
    Abstract:
    The H82 "variant" and the H69 "classic" small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell lines were treated with low levels of epirubicin (69 and 14 nM) which caused little cell death but produced the H82/E8 and H69/E8 extended-multidrug resistant sublines. Both were resistant to drugs associated with multidrug resistance (MDR), and to chlorambucil (9.5- and 5.6-fold, respectively) and cisplatin (2.3- and 8.5-fold, respectively). There was increased expression of the multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP1) in the H82/E8 subline while P-glycoprotein expression was not detected in any cells or sublines. Treatment of the H82 cells for 1 hr with 69 nM epirubicin increased MRP1-mRNA expression within 4 hr and this was associated with an increase in the resistance to epirubicin, chlorambucil, cisplatin and paclitaxel. Further, a 1 hr treatment with non-cytotoxic doses of chlorambucil (2.5 microM), cisplatin (1.3 microM) or paclitaxel (13 nM), drugs not normally associated with MRP1-mediated MDR, also increased MRP1-mRNA expression in the H82 cells with paclitaxel causing the highest increase (4.5-fold). For chlorambucil treatment, this increased MRPI-mRNA expression was accompanied by increased drug resistance while paclitaxel treatment had no effect on drug resistance in the H82 cells. For the drug resistant H82/E8 subline, these drug treatments had no effect on the MRP1-mRNA expression and little effect on increasing the subline drug resistance. However, pretreatment with paclitaxel sensitised the H82/E8 subline to chlorambucil and cisplatin returning the subline to the sensitivity of the H82 cell line. We conclude that treatment with low levels of MDR and non-MDR drugs can induce extended-multidrug resistance in SCLC cells, a process that probably involves the co-ordinate upregulation of MRP1 and other resistance mechanisms. The results also suggest paclitaxel may have a role as a response modifier in the treatment of refractory SCLC.
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