Circumvention of multidrug-resistance in murine fibrosarcoma and colon-carcinoma cells by treatment with the alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist furobenzazepine

Int J Oncol. 1994 Apr;4(4):789-98. doi: 10.3892/ijo.4.4.789.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine whether agonists and antagonists of alpha-adrenoceptors that affect calcium fluxes and protein kinase C signal transduction alter the chemosensitivity of cancer cells that exhibit multidrug resistance (MDR). The effects of nine alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists or antagonists on the in vitro chemosensitivity of the UV-2237 murine fibrosarcoma and its doxorubicin-selected MDR variants (UV-2237-R1 and UV-2237-R10) were examined. Noncytotoxic concentrations of the alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist furobenzazepine enhanced the antitumor activity of doxorubicin, actinomycin D, vinblastine and vincristine, but not 5-fluorouracil. Similar effects of furobenzazepine were also observed in recently established doxorubicin-resistant MDR variants of the CT-26 murine colon carcinoma. The chemosensitizing effect of furobenzazepine was associated with an increase in intracellular accumulation of anticancer drugs. Furobenzazepine did not compete with [H-3]azidopine for photoaffinity labeling of P-glycoprotein, but it did produce a transient 30% reduction of P-glycoprotein in the MDR cells. These data indicate that furobenzazepine can reverse a P-glycoprotein-mediated experimental MDR phenotype.