Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Drug-resistant tumor cells actively extrude a variety of chemotherapeutic agents by the action of the multi-drug resistance (MDR1) gene product, the plasma membrane P-glycoprotein. In this report we show that the expression of the human MDR1 gene in cultured Sf9 insect cells via a baculovirus vector generates a high activity vanadate-sensitive membrane ATPase. This ATPase is markedly stimulated by drugs known to interact with the P-glycoprotein, such as vinblastine and verapamil, and the ability of the various drugs to stimulate the ATPase corresponds to their previously observed affinity for this transporter. The drug-stimulated ATPase is not present in uninfected or mock-infected Sf9 cells, and its appearance correlates with the appearance of the MDR1 gene product detected with a monoclonal anti-MDR protein antibody and by labeling with 8-azido-ATP. The drug-induced ATPase requires magnesium ions, does not utilize ADP or AMP as substrates, exhibits a half-maximal activation at about 0.5 mM MgATP, and its maximal activity (about 3-5 mumol/mg MDR protein/min) approaches that of the well characterized ion transport ATPases. These results provide the first direct demonstration of a high capacity drug-stimulated ATPase activity of the human multidrug resistance protein and offer a new and simple assay for the investigation of functional interactions of various drugs with this clinically important enzyme.
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PMID:Expression of the human multidrug resistance cDNA in insect cells generates a high activity drug-stimulated membrane ATPase. 134 44

Cells displaying the classic multidrug resistant (MDR) phenotype possess a transmembrane protein (p170 or P-glycoprotein) which can actively extrude cytotoxic agents from the cytoplasm. A mathematical model of this drug efflux pump has been developed. Outward transport is modeled as a facilitated diffusion process. Since energy-dependent efflux of cytotoxic agents requires that ATP also bind to p170, the model includes a dynamic calculation for efflux rate which considers Michaelis-Menten kinetics for both the substrate agent and ATP. The final system consists of one partial differential equation (PDE) for the facilitated diffusion of substrate agents out of the cell, a 2 x 2 ordinary differential equation (ODE) system for the dynamic calculation of the ATP-ADP pool, and a dynamic algebraic calculation of the efflux rate given substrate levels at the interior cell membrane interface and ATP levels in the cell. A stability analysis of the ATP-ADP pool distribution and a simplistic closed form solution of the linearized PDE are included. Numerical simulations are also provided.
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PMID:A mathematical model of the P-glycoprotein pump as a mediator of multidrug resistance. 135 83

P-glycoprotein (Pgp or multidrug-resistance protein) shows drug-stimulated ATPase activity. The catalytic sites are known to be of low affinity and specificity for nucleotides. From the sequence, two nucleotide sites are predicted per Pgp molecule. Using plasma membranes from a multidrug-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cell line, which are highly enriched in Pgp, we show that vanadate-induced trapping of nucleotide at a single catalytic site produces stably inhibited Pgp, with t 1/2 for reactivation of ATPase activity of 84 min at 37 degrees C and >30 h at 4 degrees C. Reactivation of ATPase correlated with release of trapped nucleotide. Concentrations of MgATP and MgADP required to produce 50% inhibition were 9 and 15 microM, respectively, thus the apparent affinity for nucleotide is greatly increased by vanadate-trapping. The trapped nucleotide species was ADP. Divalent Cation was required, with magnesium, manganese, and cobalt all effective: cobalt yielded a very stable inhibited species, t1/2 at 37 degrees C = 18 h. No photocleavage of Pgp was observed after vanadate trapping with MgATP, nor was UV-induced photolabeling of Pgp by trapped adenine nucleotide observed. Vanadate-trapping with 8-azido-ATP followed by UV irradiation caused permanent inactivation and specific labeling of Pgp. Vanadate-induced inhibition was also shown with pure, reconstituted Pgp, with similar characteristics to those in plasma membranes. Vanadate trapping overcomes technical difficulties posed by lack of high affinity nucleotide-binding site(s) or a covalent enzyme-phosphate catalytic intermediate in Pgp. The finding that vanadate trapping of nucleotide at just one site/Pgp is sufficient to give full inhibition at ATPase activity shows that the two predicted nucleotide sites can not function independently as catalytic sites.
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PMID:P-glycoprotein is stably inhibited by vanadate-induced trapping of nucleotide at a single catalytic site. 764 18

The cDNA encoding the C-terminal nucleotide-binding domain (NBD2) from mouse P-glycoprotein involved in multidrug resistance was obtained from adrenal cell mRNA and amplified by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. NBD2 was highly overexpressed in Escherichia coli in fusion with glutathione S-transferase and could be purified after efficient thrombin cleavage. Both fused and purified NBD2 bound TNP (2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl))- derivatives of nucleotides with high affinity. TNP-ATP or TNP-ADP binding at micromolar concentrations produced a characteristic blue-shifted enhancement of extrinsic fluorescence and was specifically prevented or chased by ATP or ADP at millimolar concentrations. A similar affinity binding was monitored by quenching of intrinsic fluorescence. The spectrum of fusion protein, containing 5 tryptophan residues, was maximally quenched at 328 nm upon interaction with TNP-nucleotides. TNP-GTP exhibited a lower affinity than TNP-ATP but produced a higher maximal quenching (44% instead of 28%). The intrinsic fluorescence of purified NBD2, containing a single tryptophan residue, exhibited a narrow spectrum with a maximum at 328 nm characteristic of a hydrophobic tryptophan environment. A high quenching was observed upon nucleotide interaction with similar affinity. The results put forward a functional role for the tryptophan-containing sequence of P-glycoprotein NBD2 that was not detected up to now.
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PMID:Overexpression and purification of the carboxyl-terminal nucleotide-binding domain from mouse P-glycoprotein. Strategic location of a tryptophan residue. 791 13

A multidrug-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cell line (CR1R12) was obtained which constitutively expresses P-glycoprotein, up to 32% by weight of plasma membrane protein. CR1R12 plasma membranes had high, drug-activated ATPase activity referable to P-glycoprotein. The specific ATPase activity in the presence of verapamil was calculated to be approximately 9 mumol/min/mg (identical to 21 s-1) at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4. KM ATP was 1.4 mM, and ADP and 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate were competitive inhibitors with Ki values 0.35 and 0.44 mM, respectively. 2'-dATP was a good substrate, GTP and ITP were real but poor substrates, and ADP and AMP were not hydrolyzed. Optimal pH for ATP hydrolysis was 7.3. MgATP was the preferred substrate, and CaATP was hydrolyzed very weakly. 7-Chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-Cl) covalently labeled the P-glycoprotein, and incorporation of 1.1 mol of NBD-Cl/mol of P-glycoprotein gave 100% inactivation. ATP protected against NBD-Cl inactivation. N-Ethylmaleimide was a potent inhibitor in the absence of ATP, and in its presence significant protection from inhibition could be achieved. Vanadate and fluoroaluminate were also strong inhibitors. The plasma membranes from CR1R12 cells should provide material for purification and reconstitution of P-glycoprotein and for screening of potential "multidrug-reversal" reagents by enzymic assay.
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PMID:Characterization of the adenosine triphosphatase activity of Chinese hamster P-glycoprotein. 809 47

The Plasmodium falciparum P-glycoprotein homologue 1 (PGH1) is structurally similar to several members of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of membrane transporters. We have examined whether the nucleotide binding domains predicted from the deduced amino sequence are functional by photoaffinity labeling of purified parasite digestive vacuoles with the analogue 8-azido-alpha-[32P]ATP (8-N3-ATP). This reagent labels a 160-kDa protein in vacuoles from both a chloroquine sensitive and a chloroquine-resistant parasite isolate. The 160-kDa protein could be immunoprecipitated with affinity-purified antibodies against the P. falciparum P-glycoprotein homologue (PGH1). Inhibition of photoaffinity labeling of PGH1 could be achieved with ATP, ADP, GTP and GDP but not with AMP or GMP. In order to map the 8-N3-ATP binding sites on PGH1, photoaffinity-labeled PGH1 was digested with trypsin and immunoprecipitated with site-specific antibodies. Taken together, these results indicate that 8-N3-ATP specifically labels PGH1 and that one binding site resides within the amino terminal half of the molecule. This supports the contention that PGH1 is involved in a nucleotide-regulated transport function across the membrane of the digestive vacuole.
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PMID:Nucleotide binding properties of a P-glycoprotein homologue from Plasmodium falciparum. 809 60

The haemolysin exporter HlyB and its homologues are central to the unconventional signal-peptide-independent secretion of toxins, proteases and nodulation proteins by bacteria. HlyB is a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) or traffic ATPase superfamily, and resembles closely in structure and function mammalian exporters such as the multidrug-resistance P-glycoprotein, combining both integral membrane and cytosolic domains. Overproduction of the HlyB cytoplasmic domain as a C-terminal peptide fused to glutathione S-transferase allowed the direct affinity purification and concentration of 30-50 mg ml-1 of soluble protein (GST-Bctp) in an apparently dimeric form possessing both transferase and ATPase activity. GST-Bctp bound to ADP-agarose and was eluted specifically by ATP and ADP, affinity behaviour which was confirmed in both the full-length HlyB and the unfused HlyB cytoplasmic domain synthesized in vitro. The stoichiometry of binding to MgATP and MgADP was close to equimolar and both ligands induced substantial conformational change in the protein. Mg(2+)-dependent ATPase activity of GST-Bctp (Vmax 1 mumol min-1 mg-1, Km 0.2 mM) was comparable with the activity of the bacterial importer MalK and human P-glycoprotein reconstituted into proteoliposomes, and over an order of magnitude higher than in vitro measurements of disaggregated MalK purified from inclusion bodies. Activity was unaffected by inhibitors of F- and V-type ATPases, non-hydrolysable ATP analogues, or translocation substrate, but was severely inhibited by inhibitors of E1E2 (P-type) ATPases, and the acidic phospholipid phosphatidyl glycerol.
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PMID:ATPase activity and ATP/ADP-induced conformational change in the soluble domain of the bacterial protein translocator HlyB. 836 61

Binding protein-dependent transport systems mediate the accumulation of several ions, sugars, amino acids, and peptides in Gram-negative bacteria by using the energy of ATP hydrolysis and belong to a superfamily of membrane proteins which extends to eukaryotic cells and includes the multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein and the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator. The binding protein-dependent galactose transport system of Salmonella typhimurium comprises four proteins which have been characterized previously by molecular cloning experiments (51,000-dalton MglA protein, with a stable proteolytic product of 38,000 daltons, 33,000-dalton MglB protein, 29,000-dalton MglC protein, 21,000-dalton MglE protein). By using a MglA hyperproducing strain, we have purified a galactose-stimulated ATPase which shows a single band in polyacrylamide gels under nondenaturing conditions and shows three bands at 51,000, 38,000, and 15,000 daltons on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels (our results suggest that the bands at 38,000 and 15,000 daltons represent proteolytic products of the 51,000-dalton protein). The ATPase activity coincides with the purified protein during the two last chromatographic steps of the purification procedure, and it cannot be isolated from a strain which does not contain the mglA gene. The MglA ATPase is stimulated 3-fold by galactose and hydrolyzes ATP to ADP and Pi (Km ATP = 60 microM, Ka galactose = 0.3 mM, Vmax = 140 nmol/min/mg of protein). The gamma-phosphate of ATP is transferred neither to galactose nor to the protein itself. Vanadate, N-ethylmaleimide and 5-methoxyindole-2-carboxylic acid, a specific inhibitor of binding protein-dependent transport systems, inhibit the MglA ATPase.
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PMID:The MglA component of the binding protein-dependent galactose transport system of Salmonella typhimurium is a galactose-stimulated ATPase. 838 96

P-glycoprotein (P-gp), the multidrug resistance (MDR) gene product, is exclusively located on the canalicular membrane of hepatocytes. Recent studies using isolated rat canalicular liver plasma membrane (cLPM) vesicles indicate that daunomycin (DNM) is a substrate for the ATP-dependent P-gp efflux system in the rat liver. The isoforms of P-gp present in cLPM and in cancer cell lines differ in that the major form present in the liver represents the gene product of mdr2 in mice (MDR3 in humans; class III) while the isoform of P-gp in cancer cells is the gene product of mdr1 in mice (MDR1 in humans, class I). The objective of this study was to examine the inhibitory effects of various organic compounds, most of which have been studied previously in MDR cancer cells, on P-gp-mediated [3H]DNM uptake into cLPM. Also, the stereospecificity of P-gp for its substrates was investigated by comparing the inhibitory effects of the enantiomers and the racemic mixtures of verapamil and propranolol. DNM exhibited ATP-dependent active transport into rat liver cLPM with a Km of 26.8 +/- 13.4 microM and a Vmax of 4.9 +/- 0.8 nmol/45 s/mg of protein (n = 4). ADP, AMP, and a nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue did not increase DNM transport over the control value. Thirty-one potential inhibitors were examined; only acridine orange, doxorubicin, verapamil, propranolol, phosphatidylcholine, beta-estradiol glucuronide, and DNM itself showed statistically significant inhibition of [3H]DNM uptake into cLPM. These results suggest that only a limited number of substrates bind to or are transported across the hepatic canalicular membrane via P-gp. Phosphatidylcholine, a substrate for the gene product of the class III P-gp gene, produced significant inhibition of [3H]DNM transport (30.6% at a 10-fold-higher substrate concentration), suggesting that transport may be mediated, at least in part, by this P-gp gene product. There were no statistically significant differences in the inhibitory effects of the enantiomers and racemate of verapamil on [3H]DNM transport into cLPM, but the enantiomers of propranolol exhibited stereospecific inhibition of DNM transport. (R)-(+)-Propranolol produced a statistically significant inhibition of [3H]DNM transport similar to that observed with the racemic mixture, while (S)(-)-propranolol showed no inhibition. These findings suggest that bile canalicular P-gp may exhibit stereospecificity of binding or transport for its substrates.
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PMID:Inhibitors of P-glycoprotein-mediated daunomycin transport in rat liver canalicular membrane vesicles. 887 82

One of the major causes of multidrug resistance in human cancers is expression of the P-glycoprotein multidrug transporter, which acts as an efflux pump for a diverse range of natural products, chemotherapeutic drugs, and hydrophobic peptides. In the present study, fluorescence techniques were used to probe the nucleotide binding domains (NBD) of P-glycoprotein. The transporter was labeled at two conserved cysteine residues, one within each NBD, using the thiol-reactive fluor 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino)-naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (MIANS), and collisional quenching was used to assess solvent accessibility of the bound probe. Acrylamide was a poor quencher, which suggests that MIANS is buried in a relatively inaccessible region of the protein. Iodide ion was a highly effective quencher, whereas Cs+ was not, demonstrating the presence of a positive charge in the region close to the ATP binding site. The fluorescent nucleotide derivative 2'(3')-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-ATP (TNP-ATP) was hydrolysed slowly by P-glycoprotein, with a V(max) approximately 20-fold lower than that for unmodified ATP, and a K(M) of 81 microM. TNP-ATP and TNP-ADP inhibited P-glycoprotein ATPase activity, indicating that they interact with the NBD, whereas TNP-AMP was a very poor inhibitor. When TNP-nucleotides bound to P-glycoprotein, their fluorescence intensity was enhanced in a concentration-dependent manner. Both TNP-ATP and TNP-ADP bound to P-glycoprotein with substantially higher affinity than ATP, with K(d) values of 43 and 36 microM, respectively. Addition of ATP led to only partial displacement of TNP-ATP. Resonance energy transfer was observed between cysteine-bound MIANS and TNP-ATP/ADP, which indicated that the two fluorescent groups are located close to each other within the catalytic site of P-glycoprotein.
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PMID:Fluorescence studies on the nucleotide binding domains of the P-glycoprotein multidrug transporter. 906 12


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