4.7 Article

Actin disruption inhibits endosomal traffic of P-glycoprotein-EGFP and resistance to daunorubicin accumulation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 292, Issue 4, Pages C1543-C1552

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00068.2006

Keywords

protein traffic; drug resistance in cancer; daunorubicin

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Intracellular traffic of human P-glycoprotein ( P-gp), a membrane transporter responsible for multidrug resistance in cancer chemotherapy, was investigated using a P-gp and enhanced green fluorescent fusion protein ( P-gp-EGFP) in human breast cancer MCF-7 cells. The stably expressed P-gp-EGFP from a clonal cell population was functional as a drug efflux pump, as demonstrated by the inhibition of daunorubicin accumulation and the conferring of resistance of the cells to colchicine and daunorubicin. Colocalization experiments demonstrated that a small fraction of the total P-gp-EGFP expressed was localized intracellularly and was present in early endosome and lysosome compartments. P-gpEGFP traffic was shown to occur via early endosome transport to the plasma membrane. Subsequent movement of P-gp-EGFP away from the plasma membrane occurred by endocytosis to the early endosome and lysosome. The component of the cytoskeleton responsible for P- gp-EGFP traffic was demonstrated to be actin rather than microtubules. In functional studies it was shown that in parallel with the interruption of the traffic of P-gp-EGFP, cellular accumulation of the P-gp substrate daunorubicin was increased after cells were treated with actin inhibitors, and cell proliferation was inhibited to a greater extent than in the presence of daunorubicin alone. The actin dependence of P-gp traffic and the parallel changes in cytotoxic drug accumulation demonstrated in this study delineates the pathways of P-gp traffic and may provide a new approach to overcoming multidrug resistance in cancer chemotherapy.

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