Expression of Glucosylceramide Synthase, Converting Ceramide to Glucosylceramide, Confers Adriamycin Resistance in Human Breast Cancer Cells*

  1. Myles C. Cabot
  1. From the John Wayne Cancer Institute at Saint John’s Health Center, Santa Monica, California 90404

Abstract

Multidrug-resistant cancer cells display elevated levels of glucosylceramide (Lavie, Y., Cao, H. T., Volner, A., Lucci, A., Han, T. Y., Geffen, V., Giuliano, A. E., and Cabot, M. C. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 1682–1687). In this study, we have introduced glucosylceramide synthase (GCS) into wild type MCF-7 breast cancer cells using a retroviral tetracycline-on expression system, and we developed a cell line, MCF-7/GCS. MCF-7/GCS cells expressed an 11-fold higher level of GCS activity compared with the parental cell line. Interestingly, the transfected cells demonstrated strong resistance to adriamycin and to ceramide, whereas both agents were highly cytotoxic to MCF-7 cells. The EC50 values of adriamycin and ceramide were 11-fold (p < 0.0005) and 5-fold (p < 0.005) higher, respectively, in MCF-7/GCS cells compared with MCF-7 cells. Ceramide resistance displayed by MCF-7/GCS cells closely paralleled the activity of expressed GCS with a correlation coefficient of 0.99. In turn, cellular resistance and GCS activity were dependent upon the concentration of the expression mediator doxycycline. Adriamycin resistance in MCF-7/GCS cells was related to the hyperglycosylation of ceramide and was not related to shifts in the levels of either P-glycoprotein or Bcl-2. This work demonstrates that overexpression of GCS, which catalyzes ceramide glycosylation, induces resistance to adriamycin and ceramide in MCF-7 breast cancer cells.

Footnotes

  • * This work was supported in part by the Strauss Foundation, Sandra Krause, Trustee, The Fashion Footwear Association of New York Shoes on Sale®, and the Breast Cancer Fund of the State of California through the Breast Cancer Research Program of the University of California, Grant 0211.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed: John Wayne Cancer Institute, 2200 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90404. Tel.: 310-998-3924; Fax: 310-449-5259; E-mail: cabot{at}jwci.org.

  • Abbreviations:
    GCS
    glucosylceramide synthase (ceramide glucosyltransferase, UDP-glucose:N-acylsphingosined-glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.80))
    GC
    glucosylceramide
    FBS
    fetal bovine serum
    MCF-7/GCS
    glucosylceramide synthase-transfected cell line
    Tet
    tetracycline
    rtTA
    reverse tetracycline transactivator
    TNF-α
    tumor necrosis factor-α
    Bcl-2
    B-cell leukemia oncoprotein, MDR, multidrug resistance
    CMV
    cytomegalovirus.
    • Received July 24, 1998.
    • Revision received October 21, 1998.
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