Photochemical internalisation of chemotherapy potentiates killing of multidrug-resistant breast and bladder cancer cells

被引:24
|
作者
Adigbli, D. K. [1 ]
Wilson, D. G. G. [1 ]
Farooqui, N. [1 ]
Sousi, E. [1 ]
Risley, P. [1 ]
Taylor, I. [1 ]
MacRobert, A. J. [1 ]
Loizidou, M. [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL Royal Free & Univ Coll Med Sch, Dept Surg, London, England
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
photochemical internalisation; multidrug resistance; breast and bladder cancer; hypericin; photodynamic therapy;
D O I
10.1038/sj.bjc.6603895
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Multidrug resistance (MDR) is the major confounding factor in adjuvant solid tumour chemotherapy. Increasing intracellular amounts of chemotherapeutics to circumvent MDR may be achieved by a novel delivery method, photochemical internalisation (PCI). PCI consists of the co-administration of drug and photosensitiser; upon light activation the latter induces intracellular release of organelle-bound drug. We investigated whether co-administration of hypericin ( photosensitiser) with mitoxantrone (MTZ, chemotherapeutic) plus illumination potentiates cytotoxicity in MDR cancer cells. We mapped the extent of intracellular co-localisation of drug/photosensitiser. We determined whether PCI altered drug-excreting efflux pump P-glycoprotein (Pgp) expression or function in MDR cells. Bladder and breast cancer cells and their Pgp-overexpressing MDR subclones (MGHU1,MGHU1/R, MCF-7, MCF-7/R) were given hypericin/ MTZ combinations, with/without blue-light illumination. Pilot experiments determined appropriate sublethal doses for each. Viability was determined by the 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazolyl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay. Intracellular localisation was mapped by confocal microscopy. Pgp expression was detected by immunofluorescence and Pgp function investigated by Rhodamine123 efflux on confocal microscopy. MTZ alone (0.1 - 0.2 mu g ml(-1)) killed up to 89% of drug-sensitive cells; MDR cells exhibited less cytotoxicity ( 6-28%).Hypericin ( 0.1 - 0.2 mu M) effects were similar for all cells; light illumination caused none or minimal toxicity. In combination, MTZ/hypericin plus illumination, potentiated MDR cell killing, vs hypericin or MTZ alone. (MGHU1/R: 38.65 and 36.63% increase, P<0.05; MCF-7/ R: 80.2 and 46.1% increase, P<0.001). Illumination of combined MTZ/hypericin increased killing by 28.15% (P<0.05 MGHU1/R) compared to dark controls. Intracytoplasmic vesicular co-localisation of MTZ/hypericin was evident before illumination and at serial times post-illumination. MTZ was always found in sensitive cell nuclei, but not in dark resistant cell nuclei. In illuminated resistant cells there was some mobilisation of MTZ into the nucleus. Pgp expression remained unchanged, regardless of drug exposure. Pgp efflux was blocked by the Pgp inhibitor verapamil ( positive control) but not impeded by hypericin. The increased killing of MDR cancer cells demonstrated is consistent with PCI. PCI is a promising technique for enhancing treatment efficacy.
引用
收藏
页码:502 / 512
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Breast cancer in Ghana: assessment of multidrug-resistant genes among breast cancer patients
    Boaitey, Gloria Agyekum
    Martini, Rachel
    Djeddar, Nourddine Dean
    Stonaker, Brian
    Patino, Stevens M.
    White, Jason
    Bonsu, Ernest Osei
    Boaitey, Yaw Agyekum
    Obirikorang, Christian
    Davis, Melissa B.
    Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah
    CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION, 2024, 33 (09)
  • [22] Paclitaxel sensitization of multidrug-resistant cells to chemotherapy is independent of the cell cycle
    Locke, V
    Davey, R
    Davey, M
    CYTOMETRY, 2001, 43 (03): : 170 - 174
  • [23] PLANT PHOSPHATIDYLINOSITOL IS MORE CYTOTOXIC TO MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT BREAST-CANCER CELLS THAN TO THE PARENT CELLS
    JETT, M
    FINE, RL
    COWAN, K
    CHABNER, BA
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR CANCER RESEARCH, 1987, 28 : 284 - 284
  • [24] The intracellular redox environment modulates the cytotoxic efficacy of single and combination chemotherapy in breast cancer cells using photochemical internalisation
    Adigbli, Derick K.
    Pye, Hayley
    Seebaluck, Jason
    Loizidou, Marilena
    MacRobert, Alexander J.
    RSC ADVANCES, 2019, 9 (44) : 25861 - 25874
  • [25] Germacrone reverses Adriamycin resistance through cell apoptosis in multidrug-resistant breast cancer cells
    Xie, Xiao-Hong
    Zhao, Hong
    Hu, Yuan-Yuan
    Gu, Xi-Dong
    EXPERIMENTAL AND THERAPEUTIC MEDICINE, 2014, 8 (05) : 1611 - 1615
  • [26] Disrupting Membrane Adaptation Restores In Vivo Efficacy of Antibiotics Against Multidrug-Resistant Enterococci and Potentiates Killing by Human Neutrophils
    Rincon, Sandra
    Panesso, Diana
    Miller, William R.
    Singh, Kavindra, V
    Cruz, Melissa R.
    Khan, Ayesha
    Dinh, An Q.
    Diaz, Lorena
    Rios, Rafael
    Shamoo, Yousif
    Reyes, Jinnethe
    Tran, Truc T.
    Garsin, Danielle A.
    Arias, Cesar A.
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2019, 220 (03): : 494 - 504
  • [27] Ecto-ATPases and caveolae in multidrug-resistant cancer cells
    Kittel, A
    Varga, G
    Liscovitch, M
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, 12 : 225 - 225
  • [28] Antineoplastic activity of heterocyclic compounds in multidrug-resistant cancer cells
    Lage, Hermann
    Kubald, Sybille
    Jella, Kishore Kumar
    Yalcin, Ismail
    Aki-Sener, Esin
    DRUGS OF THE FUTURE, 2007, 32 : 27 - 28
  • [29] Cytotoxicity of Salvia miltiorrhiza Against Multidrug-Resistant Cancer Cells
    Wu, Ching-Fen
    Bohnert, Stefan
    Thines, Eckhard
    Efferth, Thomas
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE, 2016, 44 (04): : 871 - 894
  • [30] TARGETING AND KILLING MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT BACTERIA WITH POLYPEPTIDE STAR NANOPARTICLES
    O'Brien-Simpson, N.
    Lam, S.
    Pantarat, N.
    Sulistio, A.
    Wong, E.
    Chen, Y. -Y.
    Lenzo, J.
    Holden, J.
    Blencowe, A.
    Qiao, G.
    Reynolds, E.
    JOURNAL OF PEPTIDE SCIENCE, 2016, 22 : S188 - S188