poster abstractTreatment of drug-resistant cancer cells remains a difficult problem in cancer therapy because most
resistant cells can pump out drugs or upregulate other survival pathways to bypass a targeted therapy. To
study cancers that are resistant to the common cancer drug, paclitaxel, a novel paclitaxel-resistant cell line
was generated from the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. A “spiking” method of paclitaxel
treatment was used to select for a population of cells that are resistant to the drug. This method mimics
the development of resistance in recurrent tumors in patients. However, it is difficult to study such a
heterogeneous population. To better study these cells, the paclitaxel-resistant cell line was cloned using a
limiting dilution method to provide more homogeneous populations of resistant cells. The 29 clones
obtained exhibited a paclitaxel IC50 range of 8 μM to 78 μM which was equivalent to a 200- to 2000-fold
increase in resistance compared to the parent line. It has been suggested that the polyphenol natural
compound, resveratrol, which has been shown to inhibit cell growth of multiple cancer types, may be
useful as a combination anti-cancer treatment or novel therapeutic for drug-resistant cancer cells. The
parent line, the heterogeneous resistant line, the least paclitaxel-resistant clone and the most paclitaxelresistant
clone were similarly sensitive to resveratrol treatment. We observed that treatment with 10-100
μM concentrations of resveratrol in all cell lines showed a reduction in cell proliferation and increased
apoptosis within 72 hours (p<0.05), with the paclitaxel-resistant cells to a greater extent. In addition,
resveratrol decreased the ability of the parent, heterogeneous resistant and the highest resistant clone cells
to form colonies (an indication of reduced cell survival capacity). This resistant cell line and its clones
provide a powerful tool to study paclitaxel-resistance in and therapeutics for breast cancer