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Membrane Transporters and Channels: Role of
the Transportome in Cancer Chemosensitivity and Chemoresistance
Ying Huang, Pascale Anderle, Kimberly J. Bussey,
Catalin Barbacioru, Uma Shankavaram, Zunyan Dai, William C. Reinhold, Audrey Papp,
John N. Weinstein and Wolfgang Sadée
Cancer Res. 2004 Jun 15;64(12):4294-301
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Abstract:
Membrane transporters and channels (collectively the transportome) govern cellular
influx and efflux of ions, nutrients, and drugs. We used oligonucleotide arrays to
analyze gene expression of the transportome in 60 human cancer cell lines used by
the National Cancer Institute for drug screening. Correlating gene expression with
the potencies of 119 standard anticancer drugs identified known drug-transporter
interactions and suggested novel ones. Folate, nucleoside, and amino acid transporters
positively correlated with chemosensitivity to their respective drug substrates.
We validated the positive correlation between SLC29A1 (nucleoside transporter ENT1)
expression and potency of nucleoside analogues, azacytidine and inosine-glycodialdehyde.
Application of an inhibitor of SLC29A1, nitrobenzylmercaptopurine ribonucleoside,
significantly reduced the potency of these two drugs, indicating that SLC29A1 plays
a role in cellular uptake. Three ABC efflux transporters (ABCB1, ABCC3, and ABCB5)
showed significant negative correlations with multiple drugs, suggesting a mechanism
of drug resistance. ABCB1 expression correlated negatively with potencies of 19 known
ABCB1 substrates and with Baker's antifol and geldanamycin. Use of RNA interference
reduced ABCB1 mRNA levels and concomitantly increased sensitivity to these two drugs,
as expected for ABCB1 substrates. Similarly, specific silencing of ABCB5 by small
interfering RNA increased sensitivity to several drugs in melanoma cells, implicating
ABCB5 as a novel chemoresistance factor. Ion exchangers, ion channels, and subunits
of proton and sodium pumps variably correlated with drug potency. This study identifies
numerous potential drug-transporter relationships and supports a prominent role for
membrane transport in determining chemosensitivity. Measurement of transporter gene
expression may prove useful in predicting anticancer drug response.
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