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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)
P-Glycoprotein, a member of the
ABC transporter
group, plays an important role in anticancer drug resistance. Many monoclonal antibodies to
P-glycoprotein
have been developed and used to study the molecular and cellular functions of
P-glycoprotein
. These monoclonal antibodies were used for gene cloning, purification and reconstitution of
P-glycoprotein
, analysis of transport functions of
P-glycoprotein
, immunological detection and selective killing of tumors that express
P-glycoprotein
for diagnostic, and therapeutic purposes.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to P-glycoprotein: preparation and applications to basic and clinical research. 971 59
Multidrug resistance to anti-cancer drugs is a major medical problem. Resistance is manifested largely by the product of the human MDR1 gene,
P-glycoprotein
, an
ABC transporter
that is an integral membrane protein of 1280 amino acids arranged into two homologous halves, each comprising 6 putative transmembrane alpha-helices and an ATP binding domain. Despite the plethora of data from site-directed, scanning and domain replacement mutagenesis, epitope mapping and photoaffinity labeling, a clear structural model for
P-glycoprotein
remains largely elusive. In this report, we propose a new model for
P-glycoprotein
that is supported by the vast body of previous data. The model comprises 2 membrane-embedded 16-strand beta-barrels, attached by short loops to two 6-helix bundles beneath each barrel. Each ATP binding domain contributes 2 beta-strands and 1 alpha-helix to the structure. This model, together with an analysis of the amino acid sequence alignment of
P-glycoprotein
isoforms, is used to delineate drug binding and translocation sites. We show that the locations of these sites are consistent with mutational, kinetic and labeling data.
...
PMID:A new structural model for P-glycoprotein. 984 38
ABC transporters (also known as traffic ATPases) form a large family of proteins responsible for the translocation of a variety of compounds across membranes of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The recently completed Escherichia coli genome sequence revealed that the largest family of paralogous E. coli proteins is composed of ABC transporters. Many eukaryotic proteins of medical significance belong to this family, such as the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the
P-glycoprotein
(or
multidrug-resistance protein
) and the heterodimeric transporter associated with antigen processing (Tap1-Tap2). Here we report the crystal structure at 1.5 A resolution of HisP, the ATP-binding subunit of the histidine permease, which is an
ABC transporter
from Salmonella typhimurium. We correlate the details of this structure with the biochemical, genetic and biophysical properties of the wild-type and several mutant HisP proteins. The structure provides a basis for understanding properties of ABC transporters and of defective CFTR proteins.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of the ATP-binding subunit of an ABC transporter. 987 5
A new member of the ABC superfamily of transmembrane proteins in Aspergillus nidulans has been cloned and characterized. The topology of conserved motifs subgroups AtrC in the
P-glycoprotein
cluster of ABC permeases, the members of this subfamily, are known to participate in multidrug resistance (MDR) in diverse organisms. Alignment results display significant amino acid similarity to AfuMDR1 and AflMDR1 from Aspergillus fumigatus and flavus, respectively. Northern analysis reveals that atrC mRNA levels are 10-fold increased in response to cycloheximide. Evidence for the existence of eight additional hitherto unpublished
ABC transporter
proteins in A. nidulans is provided.
...
PMID:Expression of atrC - encoding a novel member of the ATP binding cassette transporter family in Aspergillus nidulans - is sensitive to cycloheximide. 1003 28
Many substrates for
P-glycoprotein
, an
ABC transporter
that mediates multidrug resistance in mammalian cells, have been shown to stimulate its ATPase activity in vitro. In the present study, we used this property as a criterion to search for natural and artificial substrates and/or allosteric regulators of ABCR, the rod photoreceptor-specific
ABC transporter
responsible for Stargardt disease, an early onset macular degeneration. ABCR was immunoaffinity purified to apparent homogeneity from bovine rod outer segments and reconstituted into liposomes. All-trans-retinal, a candidate ligand, stimulates the ATPase activity of ABCR 3-4-fold, with a half-maximal effect at 10-15 microM. 11-cis- and 13-cis-retinal show similar activity. All-trans-retinal stimulates the ATPase activity of ABCR with Michaelis-Menten behavior indicative of simple noncooperative binding that is associated with a rate-limiting enzyme-substrate intermediate in the pathway of ATP hydrolysis. Among 37 structurally diverse non-retinoid compounds, including nine previously characterized substrates or sensitizers of
P-glycoprotein
, only four show significant ATPase stimulation when tested at 20 microM. The dose-response curves of these four compounds are indicative of multiple binding sites and/or modes of interaction with ABCR. Two of these compounds, amiodarone and digitonin, can act synergistically with all-trans-retinal, implying that they interact with a site or sites on ABCR different from the one with which all-trans-retinal interacts. Unlike retinal, amiodarone appears to interact with both free and ATP-bound ABCR. Together with clinical observations on Stargardt disease and the localization of ABCR to rod outer segment disc membranes, these data suggest that retinoids, and most likely retinal, are the natural substrates for transport by ABCR in rod outer segments. These observations have significant implications for understanding the visual cycle and the pathogenesis of Stargardt disease and for the identification of compounds that could modify the natural history of Stargardt disease or other retinopathies associated with impaired ABCR function.
...
PMID:Retinal stimulates ATP hydrolysis by purified and reconstituted ABCR, the photoreceptor-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter responsible for Stargardt disease. 1007 33
Glibenclamide is well known to interact with the sulphonylurea receptor (SUR) and has been shown more recently to inhibit the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein (CFTR), both proteins that are members of the ABC [adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette] transporters. The effect of glibenclamide and two synthetic sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives (dubbed BM-208 and BM-223) was examined on
P-glycoprotein
, the major
ABC transporter
responsible for multidrug resistance (MDR) in cancer cells. To this end, we employed different cell lines that do or do not express
P-glycoprotein
, as confirmed by Western blotting: first, a tumour cell line (VBL600) selected from a human T-cell line (CEM) derived from an acute leukaemia; second, an epithelial cell line derived from a rat colonic adenocarcinoma (CC531(mdr+)) and finally, a non tumour epithelial cell line derived from the proximal tubule of the opossum kidney (OK). Glibenclamide and the two related derivatives inhibited
P-glycoprotein
because firstly, they acutely increased [3H]colchicine accumulation in
P-glycoprotein
-expressing cell lines only; secondly BM-223 reversed the MDR phenomenon, quite similarly to verapamil, by enhancing the cytotoxicity of colchicine, taxol and vinblastine and thirdly, BM-208 and BM-223 blocked the photoaffinity-labelling of
P-glycoprotein
by [3H]azidopine. Furthermore, glibenclamide is itself a substrate for
P-glycoprotein
, since the cellular accumulation of [3H]glibenclamide was low and substantially increased by addition of
P-glycoprotein
substrates (e. g., vinblastine and cyclosporine) only in the
P-glycoprotein
-expressing cell lines. We conclude that glibenclamide and two sulphonylcyanoguanidine derivatives inhibit
P-glycoprotein
and that sulphonylurea drugs would appear to be general inhibitors of ABC transporters, suggesting an interaction with some conserved motif.
...
PMID:P-glycoprotein inhibition by glibenclamide and related compounds. 1008 41
Four ATP-binding cassette (ABC) half-transporters have been identified in mammalian peroxisomes: adrenoleukodystrophy protein (ALDP), adrenoleukodystrophy-related protein (ALDRP), 70-kDa peroxisomal membrane protein (PMP70) and PMP70-related protein (P70R). Inherited defects in ALDP cause the neurodegenerative disorder X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD). By comparative Northern blot analyses we found each of the four murine peroxisomal
ABC transporter
mRNA species at maximum abundance only in a few tissues, which differed for each family member. The four genes were also regulated differentially during mouse brain development: ALDP mRNA was most abundant in embryonic brain and gradually decreased during maturation; ALDRP and P70R mRNA accumulated in the early postnatal period; and the amount of PMP70 transcript increased slightly during the second and third postnatal week. The different expression patterns could explain why beta-oxidation is defective in X-ALD, although ALDRP and PMP70 can replace ALDP functionally in fibroblasts. Dietary fenofibrate had no effect on the ALD and P70R genes, but strongly increased expression of the ALDR and PMP70 genes in mouse liver. However, in
P-glycoprotein
Mdr1a-deficient mice fenofibrate treatment increased ALDR gene expression also in the brain, suggesting that the multidrug-transporter
P-glycoprotein
restricts entry of fenofibrate to the brain at the blood-brain barrier. Analysis of the promoter sequences revealed a cryptic nuclear hormone receptor response element of the DR+4 type in the ALDR promoter and a novel 18-bp sequence motif present only in the 5' flanking DNA of the ALDR and PMP70 genes. The mouse ALDR gene uses a single transcription start site but alternative polyadenylation sites. These data are of importance for the use of ALDP-deficient mice as a model in pharmacological gene therapy studies.
...
PMID:The four murine peroxisomal ABC-transporter genes differ in constitutive, inducible and developmental expression. 1050 4
The
ABC transporter
,
P-glycoprotein
, is an integral membrane protein that mediates the ATP-driven efflux of drugs from multidrug-resistant cancer and HIV-infected cells. Anti-
P-glycoprotein
antibody C219 binds to both of the ATP-binding regions of
P-glycoprotein
and has been shown to inhibit its ATPase activity and drug binding capacity. C219 has been widely used in a clinical setting as a tumor marker, but recent observations of cross-reactivity with other proteins, including the c-erbB2 protein in breast cancer cells, impose potential limitations in detecting
P-glycoprotein
. We have determined the crystal structure at a resolution of 2.4 A of the variable fragment of C219 in complex with an epitope peptide derived from the nucleotide binding domain of
P-glycoprotein
. The 14-residue peptide adopts an amphipathic alpha-helical conformation, a secondary structure not previously observed in structures of antibody-peptide complexes. Together with available biochemical data, the crystal structure of the C219-peptide complex indicates the molecular basis of the cross-reactivity of C219 with non-multidrug resistance-associated proteins. Alignment of the C219 epitope with the recent crystal structure of the ATP-binding subunit of histidine permease suggests a structural basis for the inhibition of the ATP and drug binding capacity of
P-glycoprotein
by C219. The results provide a rationale for the development of C219 mutants with improved specificity and affinity that could be useful in antibody-based
P-glycoprotein
detection and therapy in multidrug resistant cancers.
...
PMID:Antibody C219 recognizes an alpha-helical epitope on P-glycoprotein. 1057 Jan 32
Multidrug resistance of cancer cells is, at least in part, conferred by overexpression of
P-glycoprotein
(
P-gp
), a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of active transporters.
P-gp
actively extrudes chemotherapeutic drugs from cells, thus reducing their efficacy. As a typical
ABC transporter
,
P-gp
has four domains: two transmembrane domains, which form a pathway through the membrane through which substrates are transported, and two hydrophilic nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, which couple the energy of ATP hydrolysis to substrate translocation. It has been proposed that the NBDs of ABC transporters, including the histidine permease of Salmonella typhimurium and the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, are accessible from the extracellular surface of the cell, spanning the membrane directly or potentially contributing to the transmembrane pore. Such organization would have significant implications for the transport mechanism. We determined to establish whether the NBDs of
P-gp
are exposed extracellularly and which amino acids are accessible, using cysteine-scanning mutagenesis and limited proteolysis. In contrast to other transporters, the data provided no evidence that the
P-gp
NBDs are exposed to the cell surface. The implications for the structure and mechanism of
P-gp
and other ABC transporters are discussed.
...
PMID:Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis provides no evidence for the extracellular accessibility of the nucleotide-binding domains of the multidrug resistance transporter P-glycoprotein. 1058 Dec 53
The emergence of several newly identified members of the
ABC transporter
family has necessitated the development of antagonists that are able to inhibit more than one transporter. We assessed the ability of the chemosensitizer GF120918 to function as a multispecific antagonist using cytotoxicity assays, rhodamine and calcein efflux assays, and confocal microscopy in cell lines expressing different multidrug resistance transporters. At a concentration of 1 microM in cytotoxicity assays, GF120918 was able to sensitize both S1-B1-20, a subline expressing
P-glycoprotein
(Pgp), and S1-M1-80, a subline expressing a newly identified mitoxantrone transporter, MXR. GF120918 was ineffective in sensitizing MRP-overexpressing MCF-7 VP-16 cells to etoposide as determined by cytotoxicity studies. In flow cytometry experiments, rhodamine 123 efflux in S1-B1-20 cells was decreased at GF120918 concentrations as low as 25-50 nM, with 250 nM giving complete inhibition of rhodamine efflux. Complete inhibition of rhodamine efflux in mitoxantrone-resistant S1-M1-80 cells required 10 microM. Examination of intracellular mitoxantrone accumulation by confocal microscopy confirmed higher levels of mitoxantrone in S1-B1-20 and S1-M1-80 cells when incubated in the presence of GF120918 than when incubated with mitoxantrone alone. Thus, GF120918 appears to fit the paradigm of a multispecific blocker and is able to block rhodamine and mitoxantrone efflux by the newly identified mitoxantrone transporter. Further studies of this compound should be pursued to determine its feasibility for use in the clinic.
...
PMID:Reversal of resistance by GF120918 in cell lines expressing the ABC half-transporter, MXR. 1065 16
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