A. Reymann, G. Looft, C. Woermann
2004
Citations
1
Influential Citations
7
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
Abstract
Dexniguldipine-HCl (DNIG) — a prospective clinical modulator of p170-glycoprotein (pgp170)-mediated multidrug resistance (MRD) — was evaluated in a drug-accumulation assay in MDR murine leukemia cell strain F4-6RADR expressing pgp170. The compound elevated low accumulation of either doxorubicin (DOX), daunorubicin (DNR), or mitoxantrone (MITO) in resistant F4-6RADR cells to the very levels observed in drug-sensitive F4-6 precursor cells. In parallel with the increase in DNR content (F4-6RADR, solvent: 303±27 pmol/mg protein; DNIG (3.3 μmol/l): 1,067±174 pmol/mg protein; F4-6P, solvent: 948±110 pmol/mg protein;n=8–9, SEM), the amount of DNR tightly bound to the acid precipitate pellet obtained from F4-6RADR (i.e., protein, DNA, RNA) increased 3.9-times to the levels observed in sensitive F4-6 cells. The main pyridine metabolite of DNIG displayed similar activity. Concentration-response analysis revealed that DNIG and R,S-verapamil (VER) induced 100% reversal of the DNR accumulation shortage associated with the MDR phenotype but DNIG was 8 times more potent than VER (50% inhibitory concentration (IC50), 0.73 vs 5.4 μmol/l). In keeping with the accumulation assay, DNIG was about 10 times more potent than VER in sensitizing F4-6RADR cells to the cytostatic and cytotoxic effects of DNR in proliferation assays. In conclusion, DNIG is a potent in vitro modulator, improving (a) the accumulation of anthracycline-like cytostatics, (B) drug access to cellular binding sites, and (c) the cytostatic action of DNR in F4-6RADR leukemia cells of the MDR phenotype.