Modulation of drug resistance by alpha-tubulin in paclitaxel-resistant human lung cancer cell lines.

Eur J Cancer

Pharmaceutical Products Division, Cancer Research, Dept. 4N6, Bldg. AP9, Abbott Laboratories, IL 60064-3500, Abbott Park, USA.

Published: August 2000

Beta(beta)-tubulin isotype variation has recently been implicated in the modulation of resistance to paclitaxel in human lung cancer cells and in primary human ovarian tumour samples. Whether alpha-tubulin is involved in drug resistance has not been reported. We have generated a paclitaxel-resistant cell line (H460/T800) from the sensitive human lung carcinoma parental cell line NCI-H460. The resistant cells are more than 1000-fold resistant to taxol and overexpress P-glycoprotein. Interestingly, H460/T800 cells also overexpress alpha- and beta-tubulin as detected by Western blot analysis. From Northern blot analysis, the mechanism of tubulin overexpression appears to be post-transcriptional. To understand whether alpha-tubulin plays a role in drug resistance, we transfected antisense human kalpha1 cDNA construct into the H460/T800 paclitaxel-resistant cells. The antisense clones displayed a reduced alpha-tubulin expression, and the cells were 45-51% more sensitive to paclitaxel and other known antimitotic drugs, compared with vector transfected controls. Complementary experiments of transfecting the sense kalpha1 cDNA into H460 cells conferred a 1.8- to 3.3-fold increase in the IC(50) of several antimitotic agents. Our study suggests that alpha-tubulin is one of the factors that contributes to drug resistance.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0959-8049(00)00145-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

drug resistance
16
human lung
12
lung cancer
8
blot analysis
8
kalpha1 cdna
8
cells
6
resistance
5
alpha-tubulin
5
human
5
modulation drug
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!