P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and βIII-tubulin overexpression-mediated drug resistance leads to clinical therapy failure for paclitaxel. However, the development of paclitaxel-resistance reversal agents has not had much success. In this study, EM-E-11-4, a lathyrane-type diterpenoid extracted from Euphorbia micractina, demonstrated good anti-MDR (multidrug resistance) activity in paclitaxel-resistant tumor cells overexpressing either P-gp or βIII-tubulin. EM-E-11-4 was able to recover the effects of paclitaxel in inducing arrest at G2/M phase and apoptosis in both A549/Tax (P-gp overexpression) and Hela/βIII (βIII-tubulin overexpression) cells, respectively, at a non-cytotoxic dose. EM-E-11-4 could enable Flutax-1 and Rhodamine 123 be accumulated intracellularly at an accelerating rate in A549/Tax cells by inhibiting the activity of P-gp ATPase, rather than affecting the expression of P-gp. In addition, it also strengthened the effects of paclitaxel in promoting tubulin polymerization and the binding of paclitaxel to microtubules in vitro. It inhibited the expression of βIII-tubulin in Hela/βIII cells in a dose-dependent manner while not exerting influence on the other β-tubulin subtypes. As far as we know, this is the first study to report that a small molecule natural product could specifically inhibit the expression of βIII-tubulin. These results suggest EM-E-11-4 may serve as a promising MDR reversal agent, particularly for patients bearing tumors with high expression of P-gp and βIII-tubulin.
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