We prepared Adriamycin-resistant cancer cells by exposing an ovarian serous cystadenocarcinoma cell line to the drug. The
resistant cells also showed cross-resistance to a wide variety of other compounds, including vincristine, vinblastine, actinomycin
D, daunorubicin, mitomycin C and carboquone. Against vincristine, the cells showed a >5,000-fold increase in resistance, far
surpassing their resistance to the selection drug. The resistant cells displayed a decrease in intracellular Adriamycin content
and an increase in the mRNA of the
mdr-1 gene coding for P-glycoprotein, with no amplification of the DNA. In revertant cells, resistance to Adriamycin was lost,
but that to mitomycin C was maintained. Adriamycin resistance was partially overcome by the addition of verapamil or cyclosporin
A, but cross-resistance to mitomycin C was not influenced at all. These results strongly suggest that the resistance to mitomycin
C observed in our Adriamycin-resistant cells was due to some other mechanism than that causing multidrug resistance.