TY - JOUR
T1 - Reversion of multidrug resistance in the P-glycoprotein-positive human pancreatic cell line (EPP85-181RDB) by introduction of a hammerhead ribozyme
AU - Holm, P. S.
AU - Scanlon, K. J.
AU - Dietel, M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Dr Guido Krupp for his assistance in constructing the ribozyme and for helpful discussions, Dr Jiao Lu for preparing the plasmid pHPAPr-I neo/mdr-Rb, Birgit Schaefer and Inge Brandt for excelklnt technical assistance and James McFarland and Dr Iver Petersen for editorial help. This study was supported by the Sonderforschungsbereich 232 Hamburg/Kiel, Deutsche Fors- chungsgemeinschaft and by a grant from the NIH CA 50618 to K.T.S.
PY - 1994/8
Y1 - 1994/8
N2 - A major problem in cytostatic treatment of many tumours is the development of multidrug resistance (MDR4). This is most often accompanied by the overexpression of a membrane transport protein, P-glycoprotein, and its encoding mRNA. In order to reverse the resistant phenotype in cell cultures, we constructed a specific hammerhead ribozyme possessing catalytic activity that cleaves the 3´-end of the GUC sequence in codon 880 of the mdr1 mRNA. We demonstrated that the constructed ribozyme is able to cleave a reduced substrate mdr1 mRNA at the GUC position under physiological conditions in a cell-free system. A DNA sequence encoding the ribozyme gene was then incorporated into a mammalian expression vector (pHβAPr-1 neo) and transfected into the human pancreatic carcinoma cell line EPP85-181RDB, which is resistant to daunorubicin and expresses the MDR phenotype. The expressed ribozyme decreased the level of mdr1 mRNA expression, inhibited the formation of P-glycoprotein and reduced the cell's resistance to daunorubicin dramatically; this means that the resistant cells were 1, 600-fold more resistant than the parental cell line (EPP85-181P), whereas those cell clones that showed ribozyme expression were only 5.3-fold more resistant than the parental cell line.
AB - A major problem in cytostatic treatment of many tumours is the development of multidrug resistance (MDR4). This is most often accompanied by the overexpression of a membrane transport protein, P-glycoprotein, and its encoding mRNA. In order to reverse the resistant phenotype in cell cultures, we constructed a specific hammerhead ribozyme possessing catalytic activity that cleaves the 3´-end of the GUC sequence in codon 880 of the mdr1 mRNA. We demonstrated that the constructed ribozyme is able to cleave a reduced substrate mdr1 mRNA at the GUC position under physiological conditions in a cell-free system. A DNA sequence encoding the ribozyme gene was then incorporated into a mammalian expression vector (pHβAPr-1 neo) and transfected into the human pancreatic carcinoma cell line EPP85-181RDB, which is resistant to daunorubicin and expresses the MDR phenotype. The expressed ribozyme decreased the level of mdr1 mRNA expression, inhibited the formation of P-glycoprotein and reduced the cell's resistance to daunorubicin dramatically; this means that the resistant cells were 1, 600-fold more resistant than the parental cell line (EPP85-181P), whereas those cell clones that showed ribozyme expression were only 5.3-fold more resistant than the parental cell line.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0028169597&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/bjc.1994.286
DO - 10.1038/bjc.1994.286
M3 - Article
C2 - 7914421
AN - SCOPUS:0028169597
SN - 0007-0920
VL - 70
SP - 239
EP - 243
JO - British Journal of Cancer
JF - British Journal of Cancer
IS - 2
ER -