Berman J J
Department of Pathology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.
Cell Biol Toxicol. 1988 Sep;4(3):325-32. doi: 10.1007/BF00058740.
Ethidium bromide-resistant cell strains were obtained by continuous selection of an adult rat liver-derived cell line (ARL6T) grown in the continuous presence of 200 ng/ml ethidium bromide. Comparison of resistant strains and parental (sensitive) cells was made for uptake and binding of ethidium bromide, visualized as fluorescent ethidium bromide-nucleic acid complexes. Although uptake of ethidium bromide was similar in parental and resistant cells, efflux kinetics were markedly different. Over a three-hour period, parental (sensitive) cells maintained fluorescence following a short ethidium bromide pulse (100 micrograms/ml ethidium bromide). In contrast, ethidium bromide-resistant cell lines eliminated photographically detectable fluorescent complexes within three hours following pulse exposure to ethidium bromide. The rapid elimination of ethidium bromide-fluorescent complexes in all (5) resistant cell strains examined supports an efflux mechanism as contributing to the resistance of ethidium bromide cytotoxicity in these cells.