For reversal of MDR1 gene-dependent multidrug resistance (MDR), two small interfering RNA (siRNA) constructs were designed to inhibit MDR1 expression by RNA interference. SiRNA duplexes were used to treat human pancreatic carcinoma (EPP85-181RDB) and gastric carcinoma (EPG85-257RDB) cells. In both cellular systems, siRNAs could speci¢-cally inhibit MDR1 expression up to 91% at the mRNA and protein levels. Resistance against daunorubicin was decreased to 89% (EPP85-181RDB) or 58% (EPG85-257RDB). The data indicate that this approach may be applicable to cancer patients as a speci¢c means to reverse tumors with a P-glycoproteindependent MDR phenotype back to a drug-sensitive one. ß
Multidrug resistance (MDR) is the major cause of failure of effective chemotherapeutic treatment of disseminated neoplasms. The ''classical'' MDR phenotype of human malignancies is mediated by drug extrusion by the adenosine triphosphate binding cassette (ABC)-transporter P-glycoprotein (MDR1/P-gp). For stable reversal of ''classical'' MDR by RNA interference (RNAi) technology, an H1-RNA gene promoter-driven expression vector encoding anti-MDR1/P-gp short hairpin RNA (shRNA) molecules was constructed. By introduction of anti-MDR1/P-gp shRNA expression vectors into the extremely high drug-resistant human gastric carcinoma cell line EPG85-257RDB, the MDR phenotype was completely reversed. The reversal of MDR was accompanied by a complete suppression of MDR1/P-gp expression on mRNA and protein level, and by a considerable increased intracellular anthracyline accumulation in the anti-MDR1/P-gp shRNA-treated cells. The data indicate that stable shRNA-mediated RNAi can be tremendously effective in reversing MDR1/P-gp-mediated MDR and is therefore a promising strategy for overcoming MDR by gene therapeutic applications.
Resistance to mitoxantrone is often associated with enhanced drug efflux mediated by members of the superfamily of adenosinetriphosphate-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, i.e. MDR1/P-gp (ABCB1), MRP1 (ABCC1), or BCRP (ABCG2). So far it is unclear whether the same ABC-transporter is always activated from the beginning of mitoxantrone treatment to the end of drug exposure. Here, we demonstrate that the expression of all three extrusion pumps is induced by increasing levels of mitoxantrone resistance, but in the end, merely the overexpression of a dominant single drug transporter, i.e. Mdr1/P-gp, is realized. This upregulation of Mdr1/P-gp was reflected by amplification of the Mdr1/P-gp encoding gene. Short mitoxantrone exposure demonstrated that upregulation of two different transporters, Mdr1/P-gp and Bcrp, was induced. The data indicate that mitoxantrone treatment influences the expression of several ABC-transporters, but in the end, merely a single extrusion pump will be dominant.
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