Isolation and expression of a complementary DNA that confers multidrug resistance
The emergence and outgrowth of a population of tumour cells resistant to multiple drugs is a major problem in the chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer. We have used highly drug-resistant cell lines developed in vitro to study the molecular basis of multidrug resistance. In these cell lines high leve...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 1986-10, Vol.323 (6090), p.728-731 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The emergence and outgrowth of a population of tumour cells resistant to multiple drugs is a major problem in the chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer. We have used highly drug-resistant cell lines developed
in vitro
to study the molecular basis of multidrug resistance. In these cell lines high levels of resistance are frequently associated with amplification and overexpression of a small group of genes termed
mdr
(refs 1–3) or
gp170
(ref. 4). Direct evaluation of the role of these genes in multidrug resistance has awaited the isolation of a member of this gene family in a biologically active form. Here we report the isolation of DNA clones complementary to the cellular messenger RNA transcripts of
mdr
genes and show that high-level expression of a full-length complementary DNA clone in an otherwise drug-sensitive cell confers a complete multidrug-resistant phenotype. Our results demonstrate that overexpression of a single member of the
mdr
group is sufficient to confer drug resistance. Furthermore, because the cDNA was isolated from a drug-sensitive cell, mutations in the primary sequence of
mdr
are not required to produce a multi-drug-resistance phenotype. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/323728a0 |