International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2022)

Characterization of a Potent, Selective, and Safe Inhibitor, Ac15(Az8)<sub>2</sub>, in Reversing Multidrug Resistance Mediated by Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (BCRP/ABCG2)

  • Tsz Cheung Chong,
  • Iris L. K. Wong,
  • Jiahua Cui,
  • Man Chun Law,
  • Xuezhen Zhu,
  • Xuesen Hu,
  • Jason W. Y. Kan,
  • Clare S. W. Yan,
  • Tak Hang Chan,
  • Larry M. C. Chow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 21
p. 13261

Abstract

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Overexpression of breast cancer resistance transporter (BCRP/ABCG2) in cancers has been explained for the failure of chemotherapy in clinic. Inhibition of the transport activity of BCRP during chemotherapy should reverse multidrug resistance. In this study, a triazole-bridged flavonoid dimer Ac15(Az8)2 was identified as a potent, nontoxic, and selective BCRP inhibitor. Using BCRP-overexpressing cell lines, its EC50 for reversing BCRP-mediated topotecan resistance was 3 nM in MCF7/MX100 and 72 nM in S1M180 in vitro. Mechanistic studies revealed that Ac15(Az8)2 restored intracellular drug accumulation by inhibiting BCRP-ATPase activity and drug efflux. It did not down-regulate the cell surface BCRP level to enhance drug retention. It was not a transport substrate of BCRP and showed a non-competitive relationship with DOX in binding to BCRP. A pharmacokinetic study revealed that I.P. administration of 45 mg/kg of Ac15(Az8)2 resulted in plasma concentration above its EC50 (72 nM) for longer than 24 h. It increased the AUC of topotecan by 2-fold. In an in vivo model of BCRP-overexpressing S1M180 xenograft in Balb/c nude mice, it significantly reversed BCRP-mediated topotecan resistance and inhibited tumor growth by 40% with no serious body weight loss or death incidence. Moreover, it also increased the topotecan level in the S1M180 xenograft by 2-fold. Our results suggest that Ac15(Az8)2 is a promising candidate for further investigation into combination therapy for treating BCRP-overexpressing cancers.

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