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Research Article

Acquired multidrug resistance in human K562/ADM cells is associated with enhanced autophagy

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Pages 678-683 | Received 01 Apr 2013, Accepted 12 Aug 2013, Published online: 08 Oct 2013
 

Abstract

Autophagy, as a necessary process for survival in mammalian cells deprived of nutrients or growth factors, will be activated in many tumor cells while treated with chemotherapeutic drugs, but the role of autophagy in acquired multidrug resistance of human acute myelogenous leukemia to adriamycin-based chemotherapy remains to be clarified. Our aim was to address that question by surveying the autophagic activity in parental acute myelogenous leukemia cell line K562 and resistant sub cell line, K562/ADM, which were obtained by treating adriamycin with increasing concentrations. K562/ADM and K562 cells were exposed to PBS culture medium for 3 hours, then the stress-induced autophagy was measured. Real-time quantitative RT-PCR revealed the expression of LC3 mRNA was higher in K562/ADM than in K562 cells. LC3-II, as an autophagosomal marker, was more abundant in K562/ADM than in K562 cells measured by Western blotting. To determine the effect of 3-MA, a known specific inhibitor of autophagy, on overcoming acquired multidrug resistance induced by adriamycin, the MTT assay and flow cytometry were performed. We also found that 3-MA can enhance the growth inhibition and apoptotic effect of adriamycin in acquired resistant cells (K562/ADM). Collectively, our results provide evidence that the upregulation of autophagy plays a major role in multidrug resistance of K562/ADM cells induced by adriamycin.

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