Literature DB >> 15492283

Fluoxetine inhibits multidrug resistance extrusion pumps and enhances responses to chemotherapy in syngeneic and in human xenograft mouse tumor models.

Dan Peer1, Yaron Dekel, Dina Melikhov, Rimona Margalit.   

Abstract

Multidrug resistance (MDR) operated by extrusion pumps such as P-glycoprotein and multidrug-resistance-associated-proteins, is a major reason for poor responses and failures in cancer chemotherapy. MDR modulators (chemosensitizers) were found among drugs approved for noncancer indications and their derivatives. Yet toxicity, adverse effects, and poor solubility at doses required for MDR reversal prevent their clinical application. Among newly designed chemosensitizers, some still suffer from toxicity and adverse effects, whereas others progressed to clinical trials. Diversities among tumors and among MDR pumps indicate a need for several clinically approved MDR modulators. Here we report for the first time that fluoxetine (Prozac), the well-known antidepressant, is a highly effective chemosensitizer. In vitro, fluoxetine enhanced (10- to 100-fold) cytotoxicity of anticancer drugs (doxorubicin, mitomycin C, vinblastine, and paclitaxel) in drug-resistant but not in drug-sensitive cells (5 and 3 lines, respectively). Fluoxetine increased drug accumulation within MDR-cells and inhibited drug efflux from those cells. In vivo, fluoxetine enhanced doxorubicin accumulation within tumors (12-fold) with unaltered pharmacokinetics. In four resistant mouse tumor models of both syngeneic and human xenograft, combination treatment of fluoxetine and doxorubicin generated substantial (P < 0.001) improvements in tumor responses and in survivals (2- to 3-fold). Moreover, fluoxetine reversed MDR at doses that are well below its human safety limits, free of the severe dose-related toxicity, adverse effects, and poor solubility that are obstacles to other chemosensitizers. This low-dose range, together with the findings reported here, indicate that fluoxetine has a high potential to join the arsenal of MDR reversal agents that may reach the clinic.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15492283     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-03-4046

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  16 in total

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Review 2.  Hyaluronan-CD44 interactions as potential targets for cancer therapy.

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3.  Bisphosphorylated PEA-15 sensitizes ovarian cancer cells to paclitaxel by impairing the microtubule-destabilizing effect of SCLIP.

Authors:  Xuemei Xie; Chandra Bartholomeusz; Ahmed A Ahmed; Anna Kazansky; Lixia Diao; Keith A Baggerly; Gabriel N Hortobagyi; Naoto T Ueno
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2013-03-29       Impact factor: 6.261

4.  Differential induction of apoptosis by antidepressants in glioma and neuroblastoma cell lines: evidence for p-c-Jun, cytochrome c, and caspase-3 involvement.

Authors:  Yechiel Levkovitz; Irit Gil-Ad; Ella Zeldich; Michal Dayag; Abraham Weizman
Journal:  J Mol Neurosci       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 3.444

5.  Fluoxetine synergys with anticancer drugs to overcome multidrug resistance in breast cancer cells.

Authors:  Ting Zhou; Jingjing Duan; Yan Wang; Xin Chen; Ganping Zhou; Rongkan Wang; Liwu Fu; Feng Xu
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2012-05-02

6.  Chiral Transplacental Pharmacokinetics of Fexofenadine: Impact of P-Glycoprotein Inhibitor Fluoxetine Using the Human Placental Perfusion Model.

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Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2021-04-06       Impact factor: 4.200

7.  Fluoxetine upregulates phosphorylated-AKT and phosphorylated-ERK1/2 proteins in neural stem cells: evidence for a crosstalk between AKT and ERK1/2 pathways.

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Journal:  J Mol Neurosci       Date:  2012-06-07       Impact factor: 3.444

Review 8.  Antidepressant fluoxetine and its potential against colon tumors.

Authors:  Helga Stopper; Sergio Britto Garcia; Ana Maria Waaga-Gasser; Vinicius Kannen
Journal:  World J Gastrointest Oncol       Date:  2014-01-15

9.  Sequential array cytometry: multi-parameter imaging with a single fluorescent channel.

Authors:  Daniel R Gossett; Westbrook M Weaver; Noor S Ahmed; Dino Di Carlo
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2010-12-07       Impact factor: 3.934

10.  Effects of sertraline and fluoxetine on p-glycoprotein at barrier sites: in vivo and in vitro approaches.

Authors:  Amita Kapoor; Majid Iqbal; Sophie Petropoulos; Hay Lam Ho; William Gibb; Stephen G Matthews
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-28       Impact factor: 3.240

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