Fol. Biol. 2011, 57, 261-267

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2011057060261

The Influence of Phenothiazine Derivatives on Doxorubicin Treatment in Sensitive and Resistant Human Breast Adenocarcinoma Cells

A. Kuzma-Richeret1, J. Saczko2, Anna Choromańska2, M. Dumanska3, M. Drag-Zalesinska3, T. Wysocka3, A. Chwilkowska2, A. Pola4, D. Mosiądz4, A. Marcinkowska2, Julita Kulbacka2

1Internal Clinic, Regional Hospital, Lörrach, Germany
2Department Of Medical Biochemistry, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland
3Department Of Histology And Embryology, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland
4Department Of Biophysics, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland

Received January 2011
Accepted August 2011

Breast cancer is commonly treated by various combinations of surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy and hormone therapy. Most cancers either are increasingly resistant to any initial treatment or acquire resistance to a broad spectrum of anticancer drugs over time. Combination of more than one drug or combination with multidrug resistance (MDR) modifiers will possibly support the efficiency of the applied therapy. Understanding the MDR mechanisms in malignancies is crucial for developing novel strategies for treatment. The main goal of our study was to determine the cytostatic effect of doxorubicin in combination with phenothiazine derivatives (PD; promazine and triflupromazine) in doxorubicin-sensitive (MCF-7/WT) and -resistant (MCF-7/DOX) human breast adenocarcinoma cell lines. We determined cytotoxicity of the investigated compounds (MTT assay) after 24 and 48 h. The effect of phenothiazine derivatives was evaluated and doxorubicin localization was performed using confocal microscopy. The mode of the cell death was examined by the comet assay. We also determined the expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp), which is a membrane-associated protein responsible for the multidrug resistance.

Funding

This research was supported by Wroclaw Medical University grants Nos. 1709, 1903 and Pbmn/2.

References

15 live references