Pleiotropic phenotype of colchicine-resistant CHO cells: Cross-resistance and collateral sensitivity
✍ Scribed by N. T. Bech-Hansen; J. E. Till; V. Ling
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 684 KB
- Volume
- 88
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Colchicine resistant (CH^R^) mutants of CHO cells with reduced permeability to colchicine display extensive cross‐resistance to a number of apparently unrelated compounds including puromycin, daunomycin, emetine, ethidium bromide and gramicidin D. A positive correlation was observed between the level of cross‐resistance and the relative hydrophobicity of these compounds. The mutants also showed increased (collateral) sensitivity to local anaesthetics (procaine, tetracaine, xylocaine and propanolol), steroid hormones (1‐dehydrotestosterone, corticosterone and 5β‐pregnan‐3,20‐dione) and some Triton × compounds. In general, the degree of the pleiotropic response (cross‐resistance or collateral sensitivity) correlated with the degree of colchicine resistance in mutant lines. These results are consistent with the pleiotropic phenotype being the result of the same mutation(s) which confer colchicine resistance and support a model for resistance in which the reduced permeability is assumed to be the result of an alteration in the modulation of the fluidity of the surface membrane.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
A mutant strain (2-20) isolated by growth on medium containing oligomycin and cycloheximide was also found to be cross resistant to antimyicn, cerulenin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, triethyltin and triphenylmethylphosphonium bromide, but collaterally sensitive to dequalinium chloride, gentamycin,
The role of cellular interactions in the resistance of Djungurian hamster cells to colchicine (CH) and in the efficiency of P‐glycoprotein function was studied. Mixtures of CH‐resistant and CH‐sensitive cells as well as control unmixed cells were propagated for 3 days and the sensitivity of the cell
Transcription regulation of metallothionein (MT) isoform promoters was investigated in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) K1 and MT gene amplified, cadmium-resistant (Cd R ) cells. The transfected promoter of Chinese hamster MTI and MTII genes can be activated in both cell lines by stimulation with Cd or Z