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Featured researches published by William L. Perry.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2005

The multidrug resistance protein 5 (ABCC5) confers resistance to 5-fluorouracil and transports its monophosphorylated metabolites

Susan E. Pratt; Robert L. Shepard; Ramani Kandasamy; Paul A. Johnston; William L. Perry; Anne H. Dantzig

5′-Fluorouracil (5-FU), used in the treatment of colon and breast cancers, is converted intracellularly to 5′-fluoro-2′-deoxyuridine (5-FUdR) by thymidine phosphorylase and is subsequently phosphorylated by thymidine kinase to 5′-fluoro-2′-dUMP (5-FdUMP). This active metabolite, along with the reduced folate cofactor, 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, forms a stable inhibitory complex with thymidylate synthase that blocks cellular growth. The present study shows that the ATP-dependent multidrug resistance protein-5 (MRP5, ABCC5) confers resistance to 5-FU by transporting the monophosphate metabolites. MRP5- and vector-transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells were employed in these studies. In 3-day cytotoxicity assays, MRP5-transfected cells were ∼9-fold resistant to 5-FU and 6-thioguanine. Studies with inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from transfected cells showed that MRP5 mediates ATP-dependent transport of 5 μmol/L [3H]5-FdUMP, [3H]5-FUMP, [3H]dUMP, and not [3H]5-FUdR, or [3H]5-FU. The ATP-dependent transport of 5-FdUMP showed saturation with increasing concentrations and had a Km of 1.1 mmol/L and Vmax of 439 pmol/min/mg protein. Uptake of 250 μmol/L 5-FdUMP was inhibited by dUMP, cyclic nucleotide, cyclic guanosine 3′,5′-monophosphate, amphiphilic anions such as probenecid, MK571, the phosphodiesterase inhibitors, trequinsin, zaprinast, and sildenafil, and by the chloride channel blockers, 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoic acid and glybenclamide. Furthermore, the 5-FU drug sensitivity of HEK-MRP5 cells was partially modulated to that of the HEK-vector by the presence of 40 μmol/L 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoic acid but not by 2 mmol/L probenecid. Thus, MRP5 transports the monophosphorylated metabolite of this nucleoside and when MRP5 is overexpressed in colorectal and breast tumors, it may contribute to 5-FU drug resistance.


Cancer Research | 2005

Human Splicing Factor SPF45 (RBM17) Confers Broad Multidrug Resistance to Anticancer Drugs When Overexpressed— a Phenotype Partially Reversed By Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators

William L. Perry; Robert L. Shepard; Janardhan Sampath; Benjamin C. Yaden; William W. Chin; Philip W. Iversen; Shengfang Jin; Andrea Lesoon; Kathryn A. O'Brien; Victoria L. Peek; Mark Rolfe; Andrew W. Shyjan; Michelle Tighe; Mark Williamson; Venkatesh Krishnan; Robert E. Moore; Anne H. Dantzig

The splicing factor SPF45 (RBM17) is frequently overexpressed in many solid tumors, and stable expression in HeLa cells confers resistance to doxorubicin and vincristine. In this study, we characterized stable transfectants of A2780 ovarian carcinoma cells. In a 3-day cytotoxicity assay, human SPF45 overexpression conferred 3- to 21-fold resistance to carboplatin, vinorelbine, doxorubicin, etoposide, mitoxantrone, and vincristine. In addition, resistance to gemcitabine and pemetrexed was observed at the highest drug concentrations tested. Knockdown of SPF45 in parental A2780 cells using a hammerhead ribozyme sensitized A2780 cells to etoposide by approximately 5-fold relative to a catalytically inactive ribozyme control and untransfected cells, suggesting a role for SPF45 in intrinsic resistance to some drugs. A2780-SPF45 cells accumulated similar levels of doxorubicin as vector-transfected and parental A2780 cells, indicating that drug resistance is not due to differences in drug accumulation. Efforts to identify small molecules that could block SPF45-mediated drug resistance revealed that the selective estrogen receptor (ER) modulators tamoxifen and LY117018 (a raloxifene analogue) partially reversed SPF45-mediated drug resistance to mitoxantrone in A2780-SPF45 cells from 21-fold to 8- and 5-fold, respectively, but did not significantly affect the mitoxantrone sensitivity of vector control cells. Quantitative PCR showed that ERbeta but not ERalpha was expressed in A2780 transfectants. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments suggest that SPF45 and ERbeta physically interact in vivo. Thus, SPF45-mediated drug resistance in A2780 cells may result in part from effects of SPF45 on the transcription or alternate splicing of ERbeta-regulated genes.


Nature Genetics | 1998

The itchy locus encodes a novel ubiquitin protein ligase that is disrupted in a18H mice.

William L. Perry; Carolyn M. Hustad; Debra A. Swing; T. Norene O'Sullivan; Nancy A. Jenkins; Neal G. Copeland


Cancer Research | 1997

Human Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase Kinase 4 as a Candidate Tumor Suppressor

David H.-F. Teng; William L. Perry; James K. Hogan; Michelle L. Baumgard; Russell Bell; Simin Berry; Thaylon Davis; David A. Frank; Cheryl Frye; Thomas Hattier; Rong Hu; Srikanth Jammulapati; Teresa Janecki; Amber Leavitt; Jeff T. Mitchell; Ralph Pero; David Sexton; Marianne Schroeder; Pi Hsia Su; Brad Swedlund; John M. Kyriakis; Joseph Avruch; Paul L. Bartel; Alexander K. C. Wong; Arnold Oliphant; Alun Thomas; Mark H. Skolnick; Sean V. Tavtigian


Genomics | 1996

Mapping of unconventional myosins in mouse and human

Tama Hasson; Joseph F. Skowron; Debra J. Gilbert; Karen B. Avraham; William L. Perry; William M. Bement; Blake L. Anderson; Elliott H. Sherr; Zheng-Yi Chen; Lloyd A. Greene; David C. Ward; David P. Corey; Mark S. Mooseker; Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins


Genetics | 1996

Coupled Site-Directed Mutagenesis/Transgenesis Identifies Important Functional Domains of the Mouse Agouti Protein

William L. Perry; Takuro Nakamura; Deborah A. Swing; Lisa Secrest; Bryn Eagleson; Carolyn M. Hustad; Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins


Genetics | 1995

A transgenic mouse assay for agouti protein activity.

William L. Perry; Carolyn M. Hustad; Deborah A. Swing; Nancy A. Jenkins; Neal G. Copeland


BioEssays | 1994

The molecular basis for dominant yellow agouti coat color mutations

William L. Perry; Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2004

Evaluation of the binding of the tricyclic isoxazole photoaffinity label LY475776 to multidrug resistance associated protein 1 (MRP1) orthologs and several ATP-binding cassette (ABC) drug transporters

Anne H. Dantzig; Robert L. Shepard; Susan E. Pratt; Linda B. Tabas; Peter A. Lander; Liandong Ma; Donald C. Paul; Daniel C. Williams; Sheng-Bin Peng; Christopher A. Slapak; Nathalie Godinot; William L. Perry


Cancer Research | 1997

Localization of SMAD5 and its evaluation as a candidate myeloid tumor suppressor

Daniel P. Hejlik; Lazar V. Kottickal; Hong Liang; Jeff Fairman; Thaylon Davis; Teresa Janecki; David Sexton; William L. Perry; Sean V. Tavtigian; David H.-F. Teng; Lalitha Nagarajan

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Nancy A. Jenkins

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Neal G. Copeland

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Carolyn M. Hustad

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Deborah A. Swing

National Institutes of Health

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