The development of tumor drug resistance is the major obstacle to successful systemic chemotherapy. Therefore, devising methods for reversing drug resistance is a high priority and could lead to significant improvements in cancer treatment. The mechanisms of tumor drug resistance are manifold and are not well understood. The phenomenon of multidrug resistance (MDR) represents the development of resistance to most drugs, regardless of their chemical structure. Several types of MDR are known, for example, the overexpression of a cell membrane glycoprotein (P-170), increased activity of glutathione S-transferase, elevated levels of glutathione (GSH), and alterations in topoisomerase action. A partial reversal of tumor drug resistance has been achieved by the use of competitive inhibitors for the function of glycoprotein P-170, or by the inhibition of GSH synthesis; however, this strategy has not been substantially successful for improving the response of human tumors to clinical therapy. We have recently used electroporation, in conjunction with the cytotoxic drug, cisplatin (cDDP), in an attempt to circumvent drug resistance in cDDP-resistant mouse tumor cells (RIF/Ptr1). Electroporation is the application of a high-voltage electric shock which is known to create transient pores in plasma membranes of cultured cells. Electroporation plus cDDP treatment increased intracellular cDDP concentration and reversed cellular resistance to cDDP-induced cell killing.

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