PMID: 11606393Oct 19, 2001Paper

Cross-resistance to the synthetic retinoid CD437 in a paclitaxel-resistant human ovarian carcinoma cell line is independent of the overexpression of retinoic acid receptor-gamma

Cancer Research
A KumarH Parekh

Abstract

Treatment of ovarian carcinomas with the antimitotic antitumor drug paclitaxel is highly efficacious. However, development of drug resistance presents a major obstacle. The common cellular phenotypes associated with paclitaxel resistance are an increased expression of the drug transport protein P-glycoprotein (P-gp), an alteration in the levels of beta-tubulin isotypes, and/or changes in the drug binding affinity of the microtubules. We established two paclitaxel-resistant human ovarian carcinoma cell lines. The 2008/17/4 cells exhibited a "classic" multidrug-resistant phenotype (overexpression of P-gp associated with cross-resistance to natural product drugs), whereas the 2008/13/4 cells were an atypical multidrug-resistant subline (no overexpression of P-gp). In addition to being paclitaxel resistant (250-fold), the 2008/13/4 cells were also cross-resistant to etoposide (39-fold) and vincristine (460-fold). To identify the alterations in the gene expression profile associated with the development of atypical paclitaxel resistance, we used the Clontech Atlas Human Cancer cDNA Microarray (spotted with 588 genes). The expression of retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-gamma was significantly higher in the paclitaxel-resistant (2008/13/4...Continue Reading

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Antimicrobial Resistance (ASM)

Antimicrobial resistance poses a significant threat to the continued successful use of antimicrobial agents for the treatment of bacterial infections.

Antimicrobial Resistance

Antimicrobial resistance poses a significant threat to the continued successful use of antimicrobial agents for the treatment of bacterial infections.