Joyce K. Randolph
Virginia Commonwealth University
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Featured researches published by Joyce K. Randolph.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 1992
Amy L. Ellis; Craig E. Munger; Roderick T. Bunch; Karen E. Woods; Joyce K. Randolph; Lawrence Boise; Paul Swerdlow; Leonard A. Zwelling; Michael Hinds; Saul Yanovich; David A. Gewirtz
A carcinogen-transformed rat hepatoma cell line (Reuber H-35) was utilized as a model system for investigation of the biochemical factors which may limit the effectiveness of chemotherapy in intrinsically resistant tumors such as hepatocellular carcinoma. Northern blotting demonstrated expression of mRNA coding for the P-170 membrane-glycoprotein associated with the multi-drug resistance phenotype, while Western blotting identified the P-170 glycoprotein in the hepatoma cell membrane. Consistent with these observations, tumor cell sensitivity to the vinca alkaloids, vincristine and vinblastine, to the anthracycline antibiotics, Adriamycin and daunorubicin, and to the demethylepipodophyllotoxin derivative, VM-26, was enhanced by continuous incubation in the presence of the calcium channel antagonist, verapamil. Verapamil produced a minimal change in cell sensitivity to the demethylepipodophyllotoxin derivative, VP-16, and to the aminoacridine, m-AMSA. Relatively high detoxification potential via the glutathione metabolic pathway was also observed in the hepatoma cell. The capacity of topoisomerase II in nuclear extracts from the hepatoma cell to mediate cleavable complex formation stimulated by VM-26, VP-16 and m-AMSA appeared to be at least comparable to, if not greater than that from drug-sensitive HL-60 cells, suggesting that drug resistance may not occur at the level of this enzyme. Consistent with findings in a number of tumor cell lines resistant to antineoplastic drugs, the antiproliferative activity of the topoisomerase II inhibitors VM-26, VP-16 and m-AMSA appeared to be dissociable from the induction of DNA strand breaks, suggesting that such lesions in DNA may fail to fully account for the antiproliferative activity of these agents in the hepatoma cell.
Cancer Research | 1979
David A. Gewirtz; J. Courtland White; Joyce K. Randolph; I.David Goldman
Cancer Research | 1980
Gewirtz Da; White Jc; Joyce K. Randolph; Goldman Id
Cancer Research | 1993
David A. Gewirtz; Michael S. Orr; Frank A. Fornari; Joyce K. Randolph; Jack C. Yalowich; Mary K. Ritke; Lawrence F. Povirk; Roderick T. Bunch
Cancer Research | 1988
Craig E. Munger; Amy L. Ellis; Karen E. Woods; Joyce K. Randolph; Saul Yanovich; David A. Gewirtz
Cancer Research | 1980
Gewirtz Da; Joyce K. Randolph; Goldman Id
Cancer Research | 1984
David A. Gewirtz; Joan H. Plotkin; Joyce K. Randolph
Molecular Pharmacology | 1982
Gewirtz Da; Joyce K. Randolph; Goldman Id
Cancer Research | 1989
Karen E. Woods; Amy L. Ellis; Joyce K. Randolph; David A. Gewirtz
Cancer communications | 1989
David A. Gewirtz; Amy L. Ellis; Joyce K. Randolph; Saul Yanovich; Paul Swerdlow; Lawrence F. Povirk; Yalowich Jc