P-Glycoprotein Substrates and Antagonists Cluster into Two Distinct Groups
- Stefania Scala1,
- Nadia Akhmed1,
- U. S. Rao3,
- Ken Paull2,
- Lu-Bin Lan4,
- Bruce Dickstein1,
- Jong-Seok Lee5,
- Galal H. Elgemeie6,
- Wilfred D. Stein4 and
- Susan E. Bates1
- 1Medicine Branch, Division of Clinical Sciences (S.S., N.A., B.D., S.E.B.), and 2Information Technology Branch, Division of Basic Sciences (K.P.), National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, 3Department of Pharmacology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina (U.S.R.), 4Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel (L.-B.L., W.D.S.),5Department of Internal Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Kyungnam, South Korea (J.-S.L.) and 6Helwan University, Cairo, Egypt (G.H.E.)
Abstract
To gather further insight into the interaction between P-glycoprotein (Pgp) and its substrates, 167 compounds were analyzed in multidrug resistant human colon carcinoma cells. These compounds were selected from the National Cancer Institute Drug Screen repository using computer-generated correlations with known Pgp substrates and antagonists. The compounds were prospectively defined as Pgp substrates if cytotoxicity was increased ≥4-fold by the addition of cyclosporin A (CsA) and as Pgp antagonists if inhibition of efflux increased rhodamine accumulation by 4-fold. Among the 84 agents that met either criterion, 35 met only the criterion for substrates, 42 met only the criterion for antagonists, and only seven met both criteria. Thus, compounds interacting with Pgp form two distinct groups: one comprising cytotoxic compounds that are transported and have poor or no antagonistic activity and a second comprising compounds with antagonistic activity and no evidence of significant transport. Vinblastine accumulation and kinetic studies performed on a subset of 18 compounds similarly differentiated substrates and antagonists, but inhibition of 3H-azidopine labeling and induction of ATPase activity did not. These data support an emerging concept of Pgp in which multiple regions instead of specific sites are involved in drug transport.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: Susan E. Bates, M.D., Bldg. 10/Rm. 12N226, NCI/NIH, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20892. E-mail: sebates{at}helix.nih.gov
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↵1 S. Scala, N. Akhmed, and S. E. Bates, unpublished observations.
- Abbreviations:
- Pgp
- P-glycoprotein
- CsA
- cyclosporin A
- DMF
- dose-modifying factor
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- Received June 20, 1996.
- Accepted February 25, 1997.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



