1. Academic Validation
  2. Cellular and biochemical characterization of VX-710 as a chemosensitizer: reversal of P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance in vitro

Cellular and biochemical characterization of VX-710 as a chemosensitizer: reversal of P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance in vitro

  • Anticancer Drugs. 1997 Feb;8(2):125-40. doi: 10.1097/00001813-199702000-00004.
U A Germann 1 D Shlyakhter V S Mason R E Zelle J P Duffy V Galullo D M Armistead J O Saunders J Boger M W Harding
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc., Cambridge, MA 02139-4242, USA.
Abstract

VX-710 or (S)-N[2-Oxo-2-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)acetyl]-piperidine-2-carboxylic acid 1,7-bis(3-pyridyl)-4-heptyl ester, a novel non-macrocyclic ligand of the FK506-binding protein FKBP12, was evaluated for its ability to reverse P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance in vitro. VX-710 at 0.5-5 microM restored sensitivity of a variety of multidrug resistant cells to the cytotoxic action of doxorubicin, vincristine, etoposide or paclitaxel, including drug-selected human myeloma and epithelial carcinoma cells, and human MDR1 cDNA-transfected mouse leukemia and fibroblast cells. Uptake experiments showed that VX-710 at 0.5-2.5 microM fully restored intracellular accumulation of [14C]doxorubicin in multidrug resistant cells, suggesting that VX-710 inhibits the drug efflux activity of P-glycoprotein. VX-710 effectively inhibited photoaffinity labeling of P-glycoprotein by [3H]azidopine or [125I]iodoaryl azidoprazosin with EC50 values of 0.75 and 0.55 microM. Moreover, P-glycoprotein was specifically labeled by a tritiated photoaffinity analog of VX-710 and unlabeled VX-710 inhibited analog binding with an EC50 of 0.75 microM. VX-710 also stimulated the vanadate-inhibitable P-glycoprotein ATPase activity 2- to 3-fold in a concentration-dependent manner with an apparent k(a) of 0.1 microM. These data indicate that a direct, high-affinity interaction of VX-710 with P-glycoprotein prevents efflux of cytotoxic drugs by the MDR1 gene product in multidrug resistant tumor cells.

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