Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.3.44 (P-glycoprotein)
13,344 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The drug-binding domain of the human multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-gp) probably consists of residues from multiple transmembrane (TM) segments. In this study, we tested whether the amino acids in TM11 participate in binding drug substrates. Each residue in TM11 was initially altered by site-directed mutagenesis and assayed for drug-stimulated ATPase activity in the presence of verapamil, vinblastine, or colchicine. Mutants G939V, F942A, T945A, Q946A, A947L, Y953A, A954L, and G955V had altered drug-stimulated ATPase activities. Direct evidence for binding of drug substrate was then determined by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis of the residues in TM11 and inhibition of drug-stimulated ATPase activity by dibromobimane, a thiol-reactive substrate. Dibromobimane inhibited the drug-stimulated ATPase activities of two mutants, F942C and T945C, by more than 75%. These results suggest that residues Phe(942) and Thr(945) in TM11, together with residues previously identified in TM6 (Leu(339) and Ala(342)) and TM12 (Leu(975), Val(982), and Ala(985)) (Loo, T. W., and Clarke, D. M. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 31945-31948) form part of the drug-binding domain of P-gp.
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PMID:Identification of residues in the drug-binding domain of human P-glycoprotein. Analysis of transmembrane segment 11 by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis and inhibition by dibromobimane. 1058 7

Cyclic depsipeptide cyclo-[D-Hmp(1)-L-MeVal(2)-L-Phe(3)-L-MePhe(4)-L-Pro(5)-L-aIle+ ++(6)-L-MeVal(7)-L-Leu(8)-L-betaHOMeVal(9)], the antifungal antibiotic aureobasidin A (AbA), was reported to interfere with ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters in yeast and mammalian cells, particularly the MDR1 P-glycoprotein (Pgp), a transmembrane phospholipid flippase or "hydrophobic vacuum cleaner" that mediates multidrug resistance (MDR) of cancer cells. In a standardized assay that measures Pgp function by the Pgp-mediated efflux of the calcein-AM Pgp substrate and uses human lymphoblastoid MDR-CEM (VBL(100)) cells as highly resistant Pgp-expressing cells and the cyclic undecapeptide cyclosporin A (CsA) as a reference MDR-reversing agent (IC(50) of 3.4 microM), AbA was found to be a more active Pgp inhibitor (IC(50) of 2.3 microM). Out of seven natural analogues and 18 chemical derivatives of AbA, several were shown to display even more potent Pgp-inhibitory activity. The Pgp-inhibitory activity was increased about 2-fold by some minor modifications such as those found in the naturally occurring aureobasidins AbB ([D-Hiv(1)]-AbA), AbC ([Val(6)]-AbA), and AbD [gammaHOMeVal(9)]-AbA). The replacement of the [Phe(3)-MePhe(4)-Pro(5)] tripeptide by an 8-aminocaprylic acid or the N(7)()-desmethylation of MeVal(7) led to only a 3.3-fold decreased capacity to inhibit Pgp function, suggesting that the Pgp inhibitory potential of aureobasidins, though favored by the establishment of an antiparallel beta-sheet between the [D-Hmp(1)-L-MeVal(2)-L-Phe(3)] and [L-aIle(6)-L-MeVal(7)-L-Leu(8)-] tripeptides, does not critically depend on the occurrence of the [L-Phe(3)-L-MePhe(4)-L-Pro(5)-L-aIle(6)] type II' beta-turn secondary structure. In contrast, the most potent Pgp inhibitors were found among AbA analogues with [betaHO-MeVal(9)] residue alterations, with some data suggesting a negative impact of the [L-Leu(8)-L-betaHOMeVal(9)-D-Hmp(1)] gamma-turn secondary structure on Pgp inhibitory potential. The [2,3-dehydro-MeVal(9)]-AbA was the most potent Pgp inhibitory aureobasidin, being 13-fold more potent than AbA and 19-fold more potent (on a molar basis) than CsA. Finally, there was no correlation between the SAR for the human MDR1 Pgp inhibition and the SAR for Saccharomyces cerevisiae antifungal activity, which is mediated by an inositol phosphoceramide synthase activity.
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PMID:Aureobasidins: structure-activity relationships for the inhibition of the human MDR1 P-glycoprotein ABC-transporter. 1089 Nov 14

By derivatization at the N-terminus of amino acid-based anticancer agents (e.g. melphalan and acivicin) to form a drug delivery system (TDDS), we demonstrate a change in the mechanism of brain uptake from the large neutral amino acid transporter (LAT) pathway to passive. An in situ rat brain perfusion technique was used to determine the brain capillary permeability-surface area (PA) product for [(14)C]L-Leu as control (5.18 +/- 0.32 x 10(-2) mL/s/g), which was inhibited competitively (to 7-18% of control) by an excess concentration of the amino-acid-containing anticancer agents, acivicin and melphalan. However, TDDS did not compete for LAT-mediated brain uptake of the radiotracer [(14)C]L-Leu. Brain uptake of TDDS was determined after in situ brain perfusion followed by RP-HPLC along with LC-MS/MS detection of the analytes in brain samples. The PA product for CH(3)-TDDS containing melphalan (5.09 +/- 2.0 x 10(-2) mL/s/g) shows that these agents rapidly cross the blood-brain barrier. Furthermore, competition studies of CH(3)-TDDS with [(3)H]verapamil suggest that the TDDS interacts significantly with the multidrug resistant efflux system (P-glycoprotein) at the blood-brain barrier. Therefore, TDDS were shown to lack LAT-mediated brain uptake. The drug delivery systems, however, showed uptake predominantly via the passive route along with recognition by the multidrug resistant efflux protein at the cerebrovasculature.
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PMID:A bioreversible prodrug approach designed to shift mechanism of brain uptake for amino-acid-containing anticancer agents. 1118 16

Small hydrophobic peptides were studied as possible substrates of the multidrug resistance protein (MRP)-1 (ABCC1) transmembrane transporter molecule. As observed earlier for P-glycoprotein- (Pgp; ABCB1) overexpressing cells, MRP1-overexpressing cells, including cells stably transfected with the MRP1 cDNA, showed distinct resistance to the cytotoxic peptide N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-norleucinal (ALLN). Resistance to this peptide and another toxic peptide derivative, which is based on a Thr-His-Thr-Nle-Glu-Gly backbone conjugated to butyl and benzyl groups (4A6), could be reversed by MRP1 inhibitors. The reduced toxicity of 4A6 in MRP1-overexpressing cells was found to be associated with lower accumulation of a fluorescein-labeled derivative of this peptide. Glutathione (GSH) depletion had a clear effect on resistance to ALLN but hardly affected 4A6 resistance. In a limited structure-activity study using peptides that are analogous to 4A6, MRP1-overexpressing cells were found to be resistant to these peptides as well. Remarkably, when selecting A2780 ovarian cancer cells for resistance to ALLN, even in the absence of Pgp blockers, resulting cell lines had up-regulated MRP1, rather than any of the other currently known multidrug resistance transporter molecules including Pgp, MRP2 (ABCC2), MRP3 (ABCC3), MRP5 (ABCCS), and the breast cancer resistance protein ABCG2. ALLN-resistant, MRP1-overexpressing cells were found to be cross-resistant to 4A6 and the classical multidrug resistance drugs doxorubicin, vincristine, and etoposide. This establishes MRP1 as a transporter for small hydrophobic peptides. More extensive structure-activity relationship studies should allow the identification of clinically useful peptide antagonists of MRP1.
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PMID:Peptide transport by the multidrug resistance protein MRP1. 1128 30

Lysyl endopeptidase (LE) from Achromobacter lyticus M497-1 (EC 3.4.21.50) was utilized to prepare F(ab')2 fragments from mouse anti-P-glycoprotein IgG2a obtained from the UIC2 hybridoma. This report describes a novel single step purification procedure for F(ab')2 fragments that eliminates residual LE activity responsible for secondary cleavage of F(ab')2 to Fab fragments. The purification of F(ab')2 and Fc fragments was accomplished utilizing protein G affinity chromatography and either gradient or step changes in the pH/ionic strength for elution of the Fc and F(ab')2 fragments. Residual LE was eluted from the protein G column with buffer containing 200 mM L-lysine prior to elution of F(ab')2 and Fc fragments. The activity of LE was monitored using the fluorogenic substrate Boc-Val-Leu-Lys-7-amido 4-methyl coumarin. A similar purification procedure for F(ab')2 fragments produced following pepsin digestion of IgG2a is also outlined. The ability of Fab' fragments, from reduced F(ab')2 fragments following LE digestion of IgG2a, to conjugate to thiol reactive groups was demonstrated using N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide (HPMA) copolymer-meso chlorin e6 mono (N-2-aminoethylamide) (Mce6) conjugates containing reactive maleimide groups. The biological activity of the Fab' targeted HPMA copolymer-Mce6 conjugates was tested against the P-glycoprotein expressing human ovarian carcinoma A2780/AD cell line utilizing a cell survival assay. Fab' targeted HPMA copolymer-Mce6 conjugate demonstrated significantly higher cytotoxicity than either a monoclonal antibody (mAb) targeted HPMA copolymer-Mce6 conjugate or a non-targeted HPMA copolymer-Mce6 conjugate, p < 0.05.
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PMID:Preparation of Fab' from murine IgG2a for thiol reactive conjugation. 1169 31

The P-glycoprotein (P-gp) transport system, responsible for the efflux of many therapeutic drugs out of the brain, recently has been shown to transport the endogenous brain opiate endorphin. We used P-gp knockout mice (Mdr1a) and their controls to determine where P-gp is involved in the saturable efflux systems of four other endogenous opiate-modulating peptides across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). After injection of endomorphin-1 (Tyr-Pro-Trp-Phe-NH(2)), endomorphin-2 (Tyr-Pro-Phe-Phe-NH(2)), Met-enkephalin (Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met-OH), and Tyr-MIF-1 (Tyr-Pro-Leu-Gly-NH(2)) into the lateral ventricle of the mouse brain, residual radioactivity was measured at 0, 2, 5, 10, and 20 min later. The results showed no difference in the disappearance of any of these peptides from the brains of knockout mice compared with their controls. This demonstrates that unlike endorphin and morphine, P-gp does not seem to be required for the brain-to-blood transport of the endomorphins, Met-enkephalin, or Tyr-MIF-1 across the BBB.
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PMID:Endomorphins, Met-enkephalin, Tyr-MIF-1, and the P-glycoprotein efflux system. 1185 38

P-glycoprotein (Pgp), an anticancer drug-translocating ATPase, is responsible for multidrug resistance in cancer. We have previously shown (Nuti, S. L., Mehdi, A., and Rao, U. S. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 3424-3432) that tryptic cleavage of Pgp results in the activation of basal and drug-stimulated ATPase functions of Pgp. To understand this phenomenon, we determined the sites cleaved by trypsin and further examined whether the modulation of Pgp function is trypsin-specific or the result of proteolysis in general. The effects of chymotrypsin and proteinase K on Pgp ATPase function were studied. The results show that proteolysis of Pgp irrespective of the protease employed resulted in the activation of basal ATPase activity. However, drug-stimulated ATPase activities were differentially modulated. Immunoblot analysis of proteolytic digests indicated that, irrespective of the protease employed, Pgp was predominantly cleaved in the middle of the molecule. N-terminal amino acid sequencing of Pgp tryptic and chymotryptic peptides indicated Arg(680) and Leu(682) as the sites of cleavage, respectively. These two cleavage sites are part of the predicted linker region that joins the two halves of Pgp. Together, these results suggest that the linker region in Pgp is primarily accessible to protease action and that cleavage of this region modulates Pgp ATPase function.
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PMID:Proteolytic Cleavage of the Linker Region of the Human P-glycoprotein Modulates Its ATPase Function. 1205 98

Cyclic undecapeptide cyclo-[MeBmt(1)-Abu(2)-MeGly(3)-MeLeu(4)-Val(5)-MeLeu(6)-Ala(7)-D-Ala(8)-MeLeu(9)-MeLeu(10)-MeVal(11)], the immunosuppressive and antifungal antibiotic cyclosporin A (CsA), was reported to interfere with the MDR1 P-glycoprotein (Pgp), a transmembranous adenosine 5'-triphosphate binding cassette (ABC) transporter with phospholipid flippase or "hydrophobic vacuum cleaner" properties that mediate multidrug resistance (MDR) of cancer cells. By use of photoaffinity-labeled cyclosporins and membranes from Pgp-expressing cells, it was recently shown that in vitro, Pgp molecules could bind a large cyclosporin domain involving residues 4-9 as well as the side chain of residue 1. Tumor cell MDR can also be reversed by a product more distantly related to cyclosporin with the structure [Thr(2), Leu(5), D-Hiv(8), Leu(10)]-CsA (SDZ 214-103). In a standardized assay that measures Pgp function in vivo (on intact live cells) by the Pgp-mediated efflux of the calcein-AM Pgp substrate and uses human lymphoblastoid MDR-CEM (VBL(100)) cells as highly resistant Pgp-expressing cells, SDZ 214-103 was found to be one of the most active Pgp inhibitors among naturally occurring cyclosporins, with an IC(50) of 1.6 microM in an assay where CsA gives an IC(50) of 3.4 microM. Using the in vivo assay, 60, mostly natural, cyclosporin analogues were analyzed to establish structure-activity relationships (SAR). Our SAR are compatible with the in vitro-defined Pgp binding domain model and further disclose that in vivo Pgp inhibition is favored by larger hydrophobic side chains on cyclosporin residues 1, 4, 6, and 8 and a smaller one on residue 7, although with no effect on the residue 5 side chain; moreover, larger hydrophobic side chains on other residues 2, 3, 10, and 11 (outside the in vitro-defined Pgp binding domain) also favor the eventual inhibition of Pgp function. The N-desmethylation of any of the seven N-methylated amides, as naturally occurring in numerous cyclosporins, regularly leads to a decreased Pgp inhibitory activity (Pgp-InhA), up to its abrogation if it occurs at residues 4 and 9. Nevertheless, despite unfavorable use of [Thr(2)] and [Leu(10)] residues, all [D-Hiv(8)] analogues whose lead is SDZ 214-103 show a large Pgp-InhA. The SAR for Pgp inhibition by cyclosporins are thus very complex. Because CsA and SDZ 214-103 show largely different conformations when free in solution, but remarkably similar ones when bound to the cytosolic cyclophilins, SAR for Pgp inhibition must similarly include requirements for occurrence of suitable conformers for insertion in the cell membrane, sufficient conformational plasticity for gaining access to Pgp binding sites, and an adequate conformer structure there to achieve such binding with a high enough affinity and possibly escape from sequestration on cyclophilins.
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PMID:Cyclosporins: structure-activity relationships for the inhibition of the human MDR1 P-glycoprotein ABC transporter. 1236 87

Extensive research into mechanisms of cytotoxic drug and irradiation resistance have produced few clinically encouraging results. In this report, we apply correlation analyses to drug and irradiation response results from a cohort of 36 classical B chronic lymphocyte leukemia (CLL) patients. Nine drugs and two types of irradiation were selected according to their usefulness in CLL therapy or on the basis of their otherwise interesting mechanisms of action. Part of the results concerning individual drugs have been previously published, but new correlation analyses are presented in this paper. Altogether 2376 duplicate cultures were performed in order to determine ID(80) values, i.e. doses causing an 80% inhibition in 4-day cultures when leucine incorporation was used as an indicator of cells vitality. Non-parametric Spearman's rank order correlation confirmed a tight relationship between 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine and fludarabine, as expected. Surprisingly, correlation between two P-glycoprotein-dependent drugs, vincristine and doxorubicin, was not demonstrable. A number of entirely unexpected correlations were identified between drugs with very different mechanisms of action: (i) chlorambucil and gamma-irradiation; (ii) 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine and vincristine; (iii) 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine and gamma-irradiation; (iv) fludarabine and cis-platin; (v) doxorubicine and gamma-irradiation; (vi) prednisolone and cyclosporin A; (vii) vincristine and verapamil. Our findings emphasize: (i) the usefulness of fresh tumor cells instead of cell lines in cytotoxicity studies; (ii) the great variation in cytotoxicity in individual patients, i.e. tumor cell heterogeneity, as well as patient heterogeneity; and (iii) an entirely unexpected finding that there were tight relationships in drug and irradiation responses between substances supposed to act with very different mechanisms.
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PMID:Relationships of in vitro sensitivities tested with nine drugs and two types of irradiation in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 1236 73

In vitro stability and in vivo pharmacokinetic studies of a model opioid peptide, H-Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-Phe-D-Leu-OH (DADLE), and its cyclic prodrugs (acyloxyalkoxy-based cyclic prodrug of DADLE, coumarinic acid-based cyclic prodrug of DADLE, and oxymethyl-modified coumarinic acid-based cyclic prodrug of DADLE) were conducted. The enzymatic stability of DADLE and its prodrugs in various biological media was determined at 37 degrees C in the presence and absence of paraoxon, a known esterase inhibitor. The prodrugs exhibited metabolic stability to exo- and endopeptidases, and esterase-catalyzed bioconversion of the prodrugs to DADLE was observed. For pharmacokinetic studies in rats, various biological samples (blood, bile, urine, and brain) were collected after i.v. administration of DADLE and its prodrugs. The samples were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometric detection, and the conversion from the prodrugs to intermediates to DADLE was monitored. The prodrugs exhibited similar pharmacokinetic properties and showed improved stability compared with DADLE in rat blood. This increased stability led to higher plasma concentrations of DADLE after i.v. administration of the prodrugs compared with i.v. administration of DADLE alone. In terms of elimination pathways, metabolism by endopeptidases was the major route for DADLE elimination, whereas rapid biliary excretion was the major route of elimination for the prodrugs. The rapid elimination of the prodrugs by the liver and the formation of stable intermediates after esterase hydrolysis limited the bioconversion efficiencies of the prodrugs to DADLE after i.v. administration. The substrate activity of the prodrugs for efflux transporters (e.g., P-glycoprotein) in the blood-brain barrier significantly restricted their access to the brain.
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PMID:In vitro stability and in vivo pharmacokinetic studies of a model opioid peptide, H-Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-Phe-D-Leu-OH (DADLE), and its cyclic prodrugs. 1238 71


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