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July 2000, Volume 7, Number 14, Pages 1224-1233
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Full text  PDF
Acquired Disease
Modulation of the typical multidrug resistance phenotype by targeting the MED-1 region of human MDR1 promoter
E Marthinet1, G Divita2, J Bernaud3, D Rigal3 and L G Baggetto1

1IBCP - CNRS, Lyon, France

2CRBM - CNRS, UPR 1086, Montpellier, France

3ETS, Lyon, France

Correspondence to: L G Baggetto, IBCP - CNRS, 7 Passage du Vercors, F-69367 Lyon Cedex 07, France

Abstract

Multidrug resistance of cancer (MDR) is the major cause of failure of chemotherapy. The typical MDR phenotype is due to the overexpression of membrane proteins among which the main representative is P-glycoprotein (Pgp) encoded by the MDR1 gene. Many attempts to modulate MDR by chemosensitizers have been unsuccessful in human therapy due to their intrinsic toxic effects. In an effort to modulate the MDR phenotype efficiently we designed an antisense and a transcriptional decoy strategy targeting the TATA-less human MDR1 gene promoter. The choice of the start point of transcription in a multiple start site window is related to an upstream MED-1 cis-element, the sequence and configuration of which are specific to human MDR1 gene expressed in Pgp-overproducing cancer cells. A 12mer antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) and a 12mer double-stranded ODN, both containing the MED-1 sequence, were designed and efficiently vectorized into the nucleus with the chimerical MPG peptide. A synthetic cellular model (NIH-EGFP) and highly resistant human CEM/VLB0.45 leukemia cells, significantly responded to transfection with the ODN/MPG complex. The level of EGFP fluorescence in NIH-EGFP cells decreased, and thus its production, and viability of CEM/VLB0.45 cells decreased by 63% in the presence of vinblastine, revealing that their resistance to the anticancer drug was reversed. These results open new insights into transcriptional decoy and anti-gene therapies of MDR cancers that overproduce Pgp. Gene Therapy (2000) 7, 1224-1233.

Keywords

MDR1 gene; MED-1; peptide vector; multidrug resistance; P-glycoprotein; transcriptional decoy

Received 8 December 1999; accepted 19 April 2000
July 2000, Volume 7, Number 14, Pages 1224-1233
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Full text  PDF
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