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Query: EC:3.6.3.44 (
P-glycoprotein
)
13,344
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The human multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
(
P-gp
) interacts with a broad range of compounds with diverse structures and sizes. There is considerable evidence indicating that residues in transmembrane segments 4-6 and 10-12 form the drug-binding site. We attempted to measure the size of the drug-binding site by using thiol-specific methanethiosulfonate (MTS) cross-linkers containing spacer arms of 2 to 17 atoms. The majority of these cross-linkers were also substrates of
P-gp
, because they stimulated ATPase activity (2.5- to 10.1-fold). 36
P-gp
mutants with pairs of
cysteine
residues introduced into transmembrane segments 4-6 and 10-12 were analyzed after reaction with 0.2 mm MTS cross-linker at 4 degrees C. The cross-linked product migrated with lower mobility than native
P-gp
in SDS gels. 13
P-gp
mutants were cross-linked by MTS cross-linkers with spacer arms of 9-25 A. Vinblastine and cyclosporin A inhibited cross-linking. The emerging picture from these results and other studies is that the drug-binding domain is large enough to accommodate compounds of different sizes and that the drug-binding domain is "funnel" shaped, narrow at the cytoplasmic side, at least 9-25 A in the middle, and wider still at the extracellular surface.
...
PMID:Determining the dimensions of the drug-binding domain of human P-glycoprotein using thiol cross-linking compounds as molecular rulers. 1151 1
1. Subtle alterations in the coupling of drug binding to nucleotide hydrolysis were observed following mutation of all seven endogenous
cysteine
residues to serines in the human multidrug resistance transporter,
P-glycoprotein
. Wild-type (wt) and the mutant (cys-less) forms of P-gp were expressed in Trichoplusia ni (High Five) cells and purified by metal affinity chromatography in order to undertake functional studies. 2. No significant differences were observed in substrate ([(3)H]-azidopine) binding to wt or cys-less P-gp. Furthermore, neither the transported substrate vinblastine, nor the modulator nicardipine, differed in their respective potencies to displace [(3)H]-azidopine from the wt or cys-less P-gp. These results suggest that respective binding sites for these drugs were unaffected by the introduced
cysteine
to serine substitutions. 3. The Michaelis-Menten characteristics of basal ATP hydrolysis of the two isoforms of P-gp were identical. The maximal ATPase activity in the presence of vinblastine was marginally reduced whilst the K(m) was unchanged in cys-less P-gp compared to control. However, cys-less P-gp displayed lower overall maximal ATPase activity (62%), a decreased K(m) and a lower degree of stimulation (76%) in the presence of the modulator nicardipine. 4. Therefore, the serine to
cysteine
mutations in P-gp may suggest that vinblastine and nicardipine transduce their effects on ATP hydrolysis through distinct conformational pathways. The wt and cys-less P-gp isoforms display similarity in their fundamental kinetic properties thereby validating the use of cys-less P-gp as a template for future
cysteine
-directed structure/function analysis.
...
PMID:Detailed characterization of cysteine-less P-glycoprotein reveals subtle pharmacological differences in function from wild-type protein. 1173 36
The human multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
uses ATP to transport a wide variety of structurally unrelated cytotoxic compounds out of the cell. In this study, we used
cysteine
-scanning mutagenesis and cross-linking studies to identify residues that are exposed to the drug-binding site upon vanadate trapping. In the absence of nucleotides, C222(TM4) was cross-linked to C868(TM10) and C872(TM10); C306(TM5) was cross-linked to C868(TM10), C872(TM10), C945(TM11), C982(TM12), and C984(TM12); and C339(TM6) was cross-linked to C868(TM10), C872(TM10), C942(TM11), C982(TM12), and C985(TM12). These cysteines are in the middle of the predicted transmembrane (TM) segments and form the drug-binding site. Cross-linking between 332C(TM6) and cysteines introduced at the extracellular side of other TM segments was also done. In the absence of nucleotides, residues 332C and 856C on the extracellular side of TMs 6 and 10, respectively, were cross-linked with a 13-A cross-linker (M8M, 3,6-dioxaoctane-1,8-diyl bismethanethiosulfonate). ATP plus vanadate inhibited cross-linking between 332C(TM6) and 856C(TM10) as well as those in the drug-binding site. Instead, vanadate trapping promoted cross-linking between 332C(TM6) and 976C(TM12) with a 10-A cross-linker (M6M, 1,6-hexanediyl bismethanethiosulfonate). When ATP hydrolysis was allowed to proceed, then 332C(TM12) could form a disulfide bond with 975C(TM12). The cross-linking pattern of 332C(TM6) with residues in TM10 and TM12 indicates that the drug-binding site undergoes dynamic and relatively large conformational changes, and that different residues are exposed to the drug-binding site during the resting phase, upon vanadate trapping and at the completion of the catalytic cycle.
...
PMID:Vanadate trapping of nucleotide at the ATP-binding sites of human multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein exposes different residues to the drug-binding site. 1189 Dec 76
The most common mutation in cystic fibrosis (deletion of phenylalanine 508 (DeltaF508) in the cystic fibrosis conductance transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene) causes defective synthesis of CFTR protein. To understand how this deletion interferes with protein folding, we made the equivalent deletion (DeltaY490) in
P-glycoprotein
(
P-gp
). A Cys-less
P-gp
with cysteines in transmembrane (TM) 4 or TM5 can be cross-linked with a
cysteine
in TM12. Deleting Tyr(490) in
P-gp
resulted in an inactive and defectively processed mutant in which no cross-linking between TM4 or TM5 and TM12 was detected. Expression of the DeltaY490 mutant in the presence of a chemical chaperone corrected the processing defect and yielded active
P-gp
mutants that could be cross-linked between TM4 or TM5 and TM12. Cross-linking between TM4 or TM5 and TM12 was also detected when residues (483)TIAENIRYG(491) in
P-gp
were replaced with residues (501)TIKENIIFG(509) from CFTR (
P-gp
/CFTR). Deleting Phe(508) in the
P-gp
/CFTR chimera, however, caused defective processing of the mutant protein and no detectable cross-linking between TM4 or TM5 and TM12. The processing defect was corrected with a chemical chaperone and yielded active
P-gp
/CFTR mutant proteins that could be cross-linked. These results show that deletion at residue 490 disrupts packing of the TM segments possibly by affecting interaction between the first nucleotide-binding domain (Tyr(490)) and the first cytoplasmic loop (Glu(184)).
...
PMID:Introduction of the most common cystic fibrosis mutation (Delta F508) into human P-glycoprotein disrupts packing of the transmembrane segments. 1207 Jan 34
The human multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
(
P-gp
) pumps a wide variety of structurally diverse compounds out of the cell. It is an ATP-binding cassette transporter with two nucleotide-binding domains and two transmembrane (TM) domains. One class of compounds transported by
P-gp
is the rhodamine dyes. A
P-gp
deletion mutant (residues 1-379 plus 681-1025) with only the TM domains retained the ability to bind rhodamine. Therefore, to identify the residues involved in rhodamine binding, 252 mutants containing a
cysteine
in the predicted TM segments were generated and reacted with a thiol-reactive analog of rhodamine, methanethiosulfonate (MTS)-rhodamine. The activities of 28 mutants (in TMs 2-12) were inhibited by at least 50% after reaction with MTS-rhodamine. The activities of five mutants, I340C(TM6), A841C(TM9), L975C(TM12), V981C(TM12), and V982C(TM12), however, were significantly protected from inhibition by MTS-rhodamine by pretreatment with rhodamine B, indicating that residues in TMs 6, 9, and 12 contribute to the binding of rhodamine dyes. These results, together with those from previous labeling studies with other thiol-reactive compounds, dibromobimane, MTS-verapamil, and MTS-cross-linker substrates, indicate that common residues are involved in the binding of structurally different drug substrates and that
P-gp
has a common drug-binding site. The results support the "substrate-induced fit" hypothesis for drug binding.
...
PMID:Location of the rhodamine-binding site in the human multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein. 1222 92
Lipopolysaccharide-induced changes in blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability were investigated with a pharmacological approach in vitro. Lipopolysaccharide induced a concentration- and time-dependent (non)reversible opening of the BBB, and brain astrocytes make brain capillary endothelial cells (BCEC) resistant to this BBB disruption. De novo protein synthesis was essential for the recovery, because cycloheximide prevented the recovery process. Dexamethasone pretreated BCEC were more resistant to lipopolysaccharide, while no protective response was induced by heat shock nor by inhibition of
P-glycoprotein
. BBB opening was tempered by free radical inhibitors (i.e., pretreatment with N-acetyl-
cysteine
or uric acid combined with deferroxamine mesylate). No effects of modulators of prostanoid-, leukotriene-, or platelet-activating factor pathways were observed. Therefore, lipopolysaccharide-induced BBB opening seems to be primarily mediated by excessive free radical production.
...
PMID:Pharmacological investigations on lipopolysaccharide-induced permeability changes in the blood-brain barrier in vitro. 1253 68
The human multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
(P-gp, ABCB1) is quite promiscuous in that it can transport a broad range of structurally diverse compounds out of the cell. We hypothesized that the transmembrane (TM) segments that constitute the drug-binding site are quite mobile such that drug binding occurs through a "substrate-induced fit" mechanism. Here, we used
cysteine
-scanning mutagenesis and oxidative cross-linking to test for substrate-induced changes in the TM segments. Pairs of cysteines were introduced into a Cys-less P-gp and the mutants treated with oxidant (copper phenanthroline) in the presence or absence of various drug substrates. We show that cyclosporin A promoted cross-linking between residues P350C(TM6)/G939C(TM11), while colchicine and demecolcine promoted cross-linking between residues P350C(TM6)/V991C(TM12). Progesterone promoted cross-linking between residues P350C(TM6)/A935C(TM11), P350C(TM6)/G939C(TM11), as well as between residues P350C(TM6)/V991C(TM12). Other substrates such as vinblastine, verapamil, cis-(Z)-flupenthixol or trans-(E)-flupenthixol did not induce cross-linking at these sites. These results provide direct evidence that the packing of the TM segments in the drug-binding site is changed when P-gp binds to a particular substrate. The induced-fit mechanism explains how P-gp can accommodate a broad range of compounds.
...
PMID:Substrate-induced conformational changes in the transmembrane segments of human P-glycoprotein. Direct evidence for the substrate-induced fit mechanism for drug binding. 1260 90
The two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) of a number of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters have been shown to be functionally dissimilar, playing different roles in the transport process. A high degree of co-operativity has been determined for the NBDs of the human multidrug transporter,
P-glycoprotein
. However, the issue of functional symmetry in
P-glycoprotein
remains contentious. To address this, the NBDs of
P-glycoprotein
were expressed and purified to 95% homogeneity, as fusions to maltose-binding protein. The NBDs were engineered to contain a single
cysteine
residue in the Walker-A homology motif. Reactivity of this
cysteine
residue was demonstrated by specific, time-dependent, covalent labelling with N-ethylmaleimide. No differences in the rates of labelling of the two NBDs were observed. The relative affinity of binding to each NBD was determined for a number of nucleotides by measuring their ability to effect a reduction in N-ethylmaleimide labelling. In general, nucleotides bound identically to the two NBDs, suggesting that there is little asymmetry in the initial step of the transport cycle, namely the recognition and binding of nucleotide. Any observed functional asymmetry in the intact transporter presumably reflects different rates of hydrolysis at the two NBDs or interdomain communications.
...
PMID:The nucleotide-binding domains of P-glycoprotein. Functional symmetry in the isolated domain demonstrated by N-ethylmaleimide labelling. 1265 4
The human multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
(ABCB1) transports a broad range of structurally diverse compounds out of the cell. The transport cycle involves coupling of drug binding in the transmembrane domains with ATP hydrolysis. Compounds such as verapamil stimulate ATPase activity. We used
cysteine
-scanning mutagenesis of the transmembrane segments and reaction with the thiol-reactive substrate analog of verapamil, methanethiosulfonate (MTS)-verapamil, to test whether it caused permanent activation of ATP hydrolysis. Here we report that one mutant, I306C(TM5) showed increased ATPase activity (8-fold higher than untreated) when treated with MTS-verapamil and isolated by nickel-chelate chromatography. Drug substrates that either enhance (calcein acetoxymethyl ester, demecolcine, and vinblastine) or inhibit (cyclosporin A and trans-(E)-flupentixol) ATPase activity of Cys-less or untreated mutant I306C
P-glycoprotein
did not affect the activity of MTS-verapamil-treated mutant I306C. Addition of dithiothreitol released the covalently attached verapamil, and ATPase activity returned to basal levels. Pretreatment with substrates such as cyclosporin A, demecolcine, verapamil, vinblastine, or colchicine prevented activation of mutant I306C by MTS-verapamil. The results suggest that MTS-verapamil reacts with I306C in a common drug-binding site. Covalent modification of I306C affects the long range linkage between the drug-binding site and the distal ATP-binding sites. This results in the permanent activation of ATP hydrolysis in the absence of transport. Trapping mutant I306C in a permanently activated state indicates that Ile-306 may be part of the signal to switch on ATP hydrolysis when the drug-binding site is occupied.
...
PMID:Permanent activation of the human P-glycoprotein by covalent modification of a residue in the drug-binding site. 1271 2
Our aim is to provide molecular understanding of the mechanisms underlying the (i) interaction between the two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) and (ii) coupling between NBDs and transmembrane domains within
P-glycoprotein
(Pgp) during a transport cycle. To facilitate this, we have introduced a number of unique
cysteine
residues at surface exposed positions (E393C, S452C, I500C, N508C, and K578C) in the N-terminal NBD of Pgp, which had previously been engineered to remove endogenous cysteines. Positions of the mutations were designed using a model based on crystallographic features of prokaryotic NBDs. The single
cysteine
mutants were expressed in insect cells using recombinant baculovirus and the proteins purified by metal affinity chromatography by virtue of a polyhistidine tag. None of the introduced
cysteine
residues perturbed the function of Pgp as judged by the characteristics of drug stimulated ATP hydrolysis. The role of residues at each of the introduced sites in the catalytic cycle of Pgp was investigated by the effect of covalent conjugation with N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM). All but one mutation (K578C) was accessible to labeling with [(3)H]-NEM. However, perturbation of ATPase activity was only observed for the derivitized N508C isoform. The principle functional manifestation was a marked inhibition of the "basal" rate of ATP hydrolysis. Neither the extent nor potency to which a range of drugs could affect the ATPase activity were altered in the NEM conjugated N508C isoform. The results imply that the accessibility of residue 508, located in the alpha-helical subdomain of NBD1 in Pgp, is altered by the conformational changes that occur during ATP hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Communication between the nucleotide binding domains of P-glycoprotein occurs via conformational changes that involve residue 508. 1282 Aug 87
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