Cancer cell adhesion confers a transient, de novo drug-resistant phenotype referred to as cell adhesion-mediated drug resistance (CAM-DR). In this report, we extend the CAM-DR phenotype to primary specimens from patients with myeloma, providing further evidence that CAM-DR is a viable clinical form of drug resistance. To examine mechanisms of cellular resistance to melphalan, we compared genotypic and phenotypic profiles of acquired and de novo melphalan resistance in an isogenic human myeloma cell line. Acquired melphalan resistance (8226/LR5) was associated with decreased drug-induced DNA damage and a complex gene expression profile showing that genes involved in the Fanconi anemia DNA repair pathway are increased in the LR5 cells compared with drug-sensitive or adherent cells. In contrast, cells adhered to fibronectin accumulate similar amounts of DNA damage compared with drug-sensitive cells but are protected from melphalan-induced mitochondrial perturbations and caspase activation. Levels of the proapoptotic protein Bim were significantly reduced in adherent cells. Gene expression changes associated with de novo resistance were significantly less complex compared with acquired resistance, but a significant overlap in gene expression was noted involving cholesterol synthesis. We propose that myeloma cell adhesion promotes a form of de novo drug resistance by protecting cells from melphalan-induced cytotoxic damage and that this transient protection allows cells to acquire a more permanent and complex drug resistance phenotype associated with a reduction in drug induced DNA damage.

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