Publications by authors named "Wieslaw A Klis"

Peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase (PAM) converts inactive terminal-glycine prohormones into their activated alpha-amidated forms. PAM is thought to play a role in the development of antiandrogen drug resistance in prostate cancer (CaP) through PAMactivated autocrine growth. On the basis of the previous finding that many lung cancer cell lines excrete PAM into their culture media, this study investigates PAM levels in media collected from human CaP cell line cultures.

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A microplate screening method has been developed to evaluate the effects of test agents on the accumulation of the fluorescent P-glycoprotein (Pgp) substrates Hoechst 33342, rhodamine 123, and rhodamine 6G in multidrug-resistant (MDR) breast cancer cells that overexpress Pgp. All three substrates exhibit substantially higher accumulation in MCF7 non-MDR cells versus NCI/ADR-RES MDR cells, while incubation with 50 microM reserpine significantly reduces or eliminates these differences. Rhodamine 123 shows the lowest substrate accumulation efficiency in non-MDR cells relative to the substrate incubation level.

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