Abstract
We developed previously a resistant cell line, CEM/C2, from the human leukemia cell line CCRF-CEM by stepwise selection in camptothecin. This cell line is 974-fold more resistant to camptothecin than parental cells. Resistance is only partially explained by 2-fold reductions in topoisomerase I protein and mRNA levels. We further investigated biochemical and molecular features of topoisomerase I in the resistant cell line. Sequence analyses of the top1 cDNA from CEM/C2 identified mutations corresponding to two amino acid substitutions, Met370Thr and Asn722Ser. Asn722Ser is next to the catalytic Tyr723 in a region highly conserved among type I eukaryotic DNA topoisomerases. Recombinant top1 with the corresponding substitution was found to be catalytically active and resistant to camptothecin. These results indicate that camptothecin resistance of CEM/C2 is due to the mutation Asn722Ser and strongly suggest that the asparagine immediately flanking the catalytic tyrosine is important for the camptothecin action.
The nucleotide sequences reported in this paper have been submitted to the GenBank/EMBL DataBank with accession numbers U07804 and U07806.