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1.
Multidrug Resistance Protein 1 (MRP1) transports diverse organic anionic conjugates and confers resistance to cytotoxic xenobiotics. The protein contains two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) with features characteristic of members of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily and exhibits basal ATPase activity that can be stimulated by certain substrates. It is not known whether the two NBDs of MRP1 are functionally equivalent. To investigate this question, we have used a baculovirus dual expression vector encoding both halves of MRP1 to reconstitute an active transporter and have compared the ability of each NBD to be photoaffinity-labeled with 8-azido-[(32)P]ATP and to trap 8-azido-[(32)P]ADP in the presence of orthovanadate. We found that NBD1 was preferentially labeled with 8-azido-[(32)P]ATP, while trapping of 8-azido-[(32)P]ADP occurred predominantly at NBD2. Although trapping at NBD2 was dependent on co-expression of both halves of MRP1, binding of 8-azido-ATP by NBD1 remained detectable when the NH(2)-proximal half of MRP1 was expressed alone and when NBD1 was expressed as a soluble polypeptide. Mutation of the conserved Walker A lysine 684 or creation of an insertion mutation between Walker A and B motifs eliminated binding by NBD1 and all detectable trapping of 8-azido-ADP at NBD2. Both mutations decreased leukotriene C(4) (LTC(4)) transport by approximately 70%. Mutation of the NBD2 Walker A lysine 1333 eliminated trapping of 8-azido-ADP by NBD2 but, in contrast to the mutations in NBD1, essentially eliminated LTC(4) transport activity without affecting labeling of NBD1 with 8-azido-[(32)P]ATP.  相似文献   

2.
MRP1 (multidrug resistance protein 1) couples ATP binding/hydrolysis at its two non-equivalent NBDs (nucleotide-binding domains) with solute transport. Some of the NBD1 mutants, such as W653C, decreased affinity for ATP at the mutated site, but increased the rate of ATP-dependent solute transport. In contrast, other NBD1 mutants, such as K684L, had decreased ATP binding and rate of solute transport. We now report that mutations of the Walker A lysine residue, K684L and K1333L, significantly alter the tertiary structure of the protein. Due to elimination of the positively charged group and conformational alterations, the K684L mutation greatly decreases the affinity for ATP at the mutated NBD1 and affects ATP binding at the unmutated NBD2. Although K684L-mutated NBD1 can bind ATP at higher concentrations, the bound nucleotide at that site is not efficiently hydrolysed. All these alterations result in decreased ATP-dependent solute transport to approx. 40% of the wild-type. In contrast, the K1333L mutation affects ATP binding and hydrolysis at the mutated NBD2 only, leading to decreased ATP-dependent solute transport to approx. 11% of the wild-type. Consistent with their relative transport activities, the amount of vincristine accumulated in cells is in the order of K1333L> or =CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator)>K684L>wild-type MRP1. Although these mutants retain partial solute transport activities, the cells expressing them are not multidrug-resistant owing to inefficient export of the anticancer drugs by these mutants. This indicates that even partial inhibition of transport activity of MRP1 can reverse the multidrug resistance caused by this drug transporter.  相似文献   

3.
MRP1 belongs to subfamily "C" of the ABC transporter superfamily. The nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) of the C family members are relatively divergent compared with many ABC proteins. They also differ in their ability to bind and hydrolyze ATP. In MRP1, NBD1 binds ATP with high affinity, whereas NBD2 is hydrolytically more active. Furthermore, ATP binding and/or hydrolysis by NBD2 of MRP1, but not NBD1, is required for MRP1 to shift from a high to low affinity substrate binding state. Little is known of the structural basis for these functional differences. One minor structural difference between NBDs is the presence of Asp COOH-terminal to the conserved core Walker B motif in NBD1, rather than the more commonly found Glu present in NBD2. We show that the presence of Asp or Glu following the Walker B motif profoundly affects the ability of the NBDs to bind, hydrolyze, and release nucleotide. An Asp to Glu mutation in NBD1 enhances its hydrolytic capacity and affinity for ADP but markedly decreases transport activity. In contrast, mutations that eliminate the negative charge of the Asp side chain have little effect. The decrease in transport caused by the Asp to Glu mutation in NBD1 is associated with an inability of MRP1 to shift from high to low affinity substrate binding states. In contrast, mutation of Glu to Asp markedly increases the affinity of NBD2 for ATP while decreasing its ability to hydrolyze ATP and to release ADP. This mutation eliminates transport activity but potentiates the conversion from a high to low affinity binding state in the presence of nucleotide. These observations are discussed in the context of catalytic models proposed for MRP1 and other ABC drug transport proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The 190 kDa multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1; ABCC1) is comprised of three membrane spanning domains (MSDs) and two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) configured MSD1-MSD2-NBD1-MSD3-NBD2. MRP1 overexpression in tumor cells results in an ATP-dependent efflux of many oncolytic agents and arsenic and antimony oxyanions. MRP1 also transports GSSG and GSH as well as conjugated organic anions, including leukotriene C(4) and 17beta-estradiol 17-(beta-D-glucuronide) and certain xenobiotics in association with GSH. Previous studies have shown that portions of MSD1 and the cytoplasmic loop (CL3) connecting it to MSD2 are important for MRP1 transport function. In the present study, Cys residues at positions 43, 49, 85, 148, and 190 in MSD1 and positions 208 and 265 in CL3 were mutated to Ala and Ser, and the effects on protein expression, plasma membrane localization, trypsin sensitivity, organic anion transport, and drug resistance properties were investigated. Confocal microscopy showed that 11 of 14 mutants displayed significant levels of nonplasma membrane-associated MRP1. Most mutant proteins were also more resistant to trypsin proteolysis than wild-type MRP1. All Cys mutants transported organic anions (0.5-1.5-fold wild-type MRP1 activity), and cells expressing Ser-substituted but not Ala-substituted Cys43 and Cys265 MRP1 mutants exhibited a 2.5-fold decrease and a 3-fold increase in arsenite resistance, respectively; Cys43Ser MRP1 also conferred lower levels of vincristine resistance. These results indicate that certain Cys residues in the NH(2) proximal region of MRP1 can be important for its structure and selected transport activities.  相似文献   

5.
Multidrug resistance protein (MRP1) utilizes two non-equivalent nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) to bind and hydrolyze ATP. ATP hydrolysis by either one or both NBDs is essential to drive transport of solute. Mutations of either NBD1 or NBD2 reduce solute transport, but do not abolish it completely. How events at these two domains are coordinated during the transport cycle have not been fully elucidated. Earlier reports (Gao, M., Cui, H. R., Loe, D. W., Grant, C. E., Almquist, K. C., Cole, S. P., and Deeley, R. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 13098-13108; Hou, Y., Cui, L., Riordan, J. R., and Chang, X. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 20280-20287) indicate that intact ATP is observed bound at NBD1, whereas trapping of the ATP hydrolysis product, ADP, occurs predominantly at NBD2 and that trapping of ADP at NBD2 enhances ATP binding at NBD1 severalfold. This suggested transmission of a positive allosteric interaction from NBD2 to NBD1. To assess whether ATP binding at NBD1 can enhance the trapping of ADP at NBD2, photoaffinity labeling experiments with [alpha-(32)P]8-N(3)ADP were performed and revealed that when presented with this compound labeling of MRP1 occurred at both NBDs. However, upon addition of ATP, this labeling was enhanced 4-fold mainly at NBD2. Furthermore, the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP), bound preferentially to NBD1, but upon addition of a low concentration of 8-N(3)ATP, the binding at NBD2 increased severalfold. This suggested that the positive allosteric stimulation from NBD1 actually involves an increase in ATP binding at NBD2 and hydrolysis there leading to the trapping of ADP. Mutations of Walker A or B motifs in either NBD greatly reduced their ability to be labeled by [alpha-(32)P]8-N(3)ADP as well as by either [alpha-(32)P]- or [gamma-(32)P]8-N(3)ATP (Hou et al. (2000), see above). These mutations also strongly diminished the enhancement by ATP of [alpha-(32)P]8-N(3)ADP labeling and the transport activity of the protein. Taken together, these results demonstrate directly that events at NBD1 positively influence those at NBD2. The interactions between the two asymmetric NBDs of MRP1 protein may enhance the catalytic efficiency of the MRP1 protein and hence of its ATP-dependent transport of conjugated anions out of cells.  相似文献   

6.
Membrane transporters of the adenine nucleotide binding cassette (ABC) superfamily utilize two either identical or homologous nucleotide binding domains (NBDs). Although the hydrolysis of ATP by these domains is believed to drive transport of solute, it is unknown why two rather than a single NBD is required. In the well studied P-glycoprotein multidrug transporter, the two appear to be functionally equivalent, and a strongly supported model proposes that ATP hydrolysis occurs alternately at each NBD (Senior, A. E., al-Shawi, M. K., and Urbatsch, I. L. (1995) FEBS Lett 377, 285-289). To assess how applicable this model may be to other ABC transporters, we have examined adenine nucleotide interactions with the multidrug resistance protein, MRP1, a member of a different ABC family that transports conjugated organic anions and in which sequences of the two NBDs are much less similar than in P-glycoprotein. Photoaffinity labeling experiments with 8-azido-ATP, which strongly supports transport revealed ATP binding exclusively at NBD1 and ADP trapping predominantly at NBD2. Despite this apparent asymmetry in the two domains, they are entirely interdependent as substitution of key lysine residues in the Walker A motif of either impaired both ATP binding and ADP trapping. Furthermore, the interaction of ADP at NBD2 appears to allosterically enhance the binding of ATP at NBD1. Glutathione, which supports drug transport by the protein, does not enhance ATP binding but stimulates the trapping of ADP. Thus MRP1 may employ a more complex mechanism of coupling ATP utilization to the export of agents from cells than P-glycoprotein.  相似文献   

7.
MIANS, a sulfhydryl-reactive fluorescence, was used to label the cysteines of MRP1 (multidrug resistance protein), and the results indicated that an increase in fluorescence intensity and a large emission blue shift took place after two Cys residues of MRP1 reacted with MIANS, which demonstrated that labeled Cys residues in MRP1 reside in a relatively hydrophobic environment. The experimental results obtained from fluorescence resonance energy transfer further uncover that two Cys residues of MRP1 modified by MIANS located in the vicinity of its NBDs, of which one lies close to NBD1, and the other near NBD2. ATP, ADP and anticancer drugs can all reduce the rate of reaction of MRP1 with MIANS. The collisional quenchers, acrylamide, I-1, and Cs+ were used to assess local environments of MIANS bound to MRP1 and the results showed that the region around the MIANS-labeled cysteine is positively charged. Both MIANS and NEM, which are sulfhydryl-reactive reagents, inhibited MRP1 ATPase activity, whereas anticancer drugs activated it. These results demonstrated that all nucleotides and drugs could induce changes in conformation of the NBDs in MRP1. Nucleotides can bind directly to NBDs, but drugs may react first with TMDs, which in turn alters the accessibility of the two Cys residues bound by MIANS and affects MRP1 ATPase activity, which is coupled with the transport of its substrates. Taken together, the above experimental results provide direct evidence for further study on the coupling of translocation of the transported species to hydrolysis of ATP in MRP1.  相似文献   

8.
Multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) is a human ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter in the plasma membrane. It confers multidrug resistance to tumor cells by actively effluxing intracellular drugs. To examine the functional significance of intracellular loops (ICLs) in MRP1, we determined the effect of mutation of the amino acid sequence EXXXG, which is conserved in ICL5 and ICL7 of human MRP1, 2 and 3, sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) 1 and 2, and mouse MRP1 and 2. E and G in the ICLs of human MRP1 were mutated to L and P, respectively, and the N-terminal (including ICL5) and C-terminal (including ICL7) wild type or mutant halves of MRP1 were co-expressed in insect cells. The mutation of either ICL5 or ICL7 considerably decreased ATP-dependent LTC4 uptake into vesicles of insect cells expressing mutated MRP1. GSH-dependent photolabeling of MRP1 with an 125I-labeled photoaffinity analog of azido agosterol A (azido AG-A) was abolished by the mutations in ICL5 and ICL7. Mutations in ICL5 of MRP1 almost completely inhibited the labeling of NBD2, but not NBD1, by 8-azido-alpha-[32P]ATP. In contrast, mutations in ICL7 of MRP1 abolished the labeling of both NBDs. Mutation of either ICL5 or ICL7 of MRP1 almost completely inhibited vanadate trapping with 8-azido-alpha-[32P]ATP by both NBD1 and NBD2 domains. These findings indicate that the intramolecular signaling between NBD and ICLs in MRP1 is vital for MRP1 function.  相似文献   

9.
The relationship between MRP1 activities and its NBD conformational changes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The term multidrug resistance (MDR) is classi-cally used to define a resistance phenotype where cells become resistant simultaneously to different drugs with no obvious structural resemblance and with dif-ferent cellular targets. For some time after P-gp, the first membrane protein related with MDR, was dis-covered in 1976[1], it was widely believed that P-gp was the exclusive cause of multidrug resistance. However, increasing evidence afterward suggested that this was not the case. Several…  相似文献   

10.
Nucleotide Binding Domains (NBDs) are responsible for the ATPase activity of the multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1). A series of NBD1-linker-NBD2 chimeric fusion proteins were constructed, expressed and purified, and their ATPase activities were analyzed. We report here that a GST linked NBD1642-890-GST-NBD21286-1531 was able to hydrolyze ATP at a rate of about 4.6 nmol/mg/min (Km = 2.17 mM, Vmax = 12.36 nmol/mg/min), which was comparable to the purified and reconstituted MRP1. In contrast, neither a mixture of NBD1 and GST-NBD2 nor the NBD1-GST-NBD1 fusion protein showed detectable ATPase activity. Additionally, the E1455Q mutant was found to be nonfunctional. Measurements by both MIANS labeling and circular dichroism spectroscopy revealed significant conformational differences in the NBD1-GST-NBD2 chimeric fusion protein compared to the mixture of NBD1 and GST-NBD2. The results suggest a direct interaction mediated by GST between the two NBDs of MRP1 leading to conformational changes which would enhance its ATPase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Multidrug resistance in tumor cells is often accompanied by overexpression of multidrug resistance protein (MRP), a 190-kDa transmembrane protein that belongs to the ATP-binding cassette superfamily of transport proteins. MRP mediates ATP-dependent transport of a variety of conjugated organic anions and can also transport several unmodified xenobiotics in a glutathione-dependent manner. To facilitate structure-function studies of MRP, we have generated a panel of MRP-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Four of these mAbs, QCRL-2, -3, -4, and -6, bind intracellular conformation-dependent epitopes, and we have shown that they can inhibit the transport of several MRP substrates. Binding competition and immunoprecipitation assays indicated that mAbs QCRL-4 and -6 probably recognize the same detergent-sensitive epitope in MRP, whereas mAbs QCRL-2, -3, and -4 each bind distinct, non-overlapping epitopes. Fab fragments inhibit transport as effectively as the intact mAbs, suggesting that inhibition results from direct interactions of the mAbs with MRP. Immunodot blot and immunoprecipitation analyses revealed that the minimal regions of MRP sufficient for full reactivity of mAbs QCRL-2 and -3 are amino acids 617-858 and 617-932, respectively, which encompass the NH2-proximal nucleotide-binding domain (NBD). In contrast, the epitope bound by mAb QCRL-4 localized to amino acids 1294-1531, a region that contains the COOH-proximal NBD. However, none of the mAbs inhibited photolabeling of intact MRP with 8-azido-[alpha-32P]ATP. This suggests that rather than preventing nucleotide binding, the mAbs inhibit transport by interfering with substrate binding or by trapping MRP in a conformation that does not allow transport to occur. Our results also demonstrate for the first time that the NBDs of MRP can be expressed as soluble polypeptides that retain a native conformation.  相似文献   

12.
MRP1 transports glutathione-S-conjugated solutes in an ATP-dependent manner by utilizing its two NBDs to bind and hydrolyze ATP. We have found that ATP binding to NBD1 plays a regulatory role whereas ATP hydrolysis at NBD2 plays a dominant role in ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. However, whether ATP hydrolysis at NBD1 is required for the transport was not clear. We now report that ATP hydrolysis at NBD1 may not be essential for transport, but that the dissociation of the NBD1-bound nucleotide facilitates ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. These conclusions are supported by the following results. The substitution of the putative catalytic E1455 with a non-acidic residue in NBD2 greatly decreases the ATPase activity of NBD2 and the ATP-dependent LTC4 transport, indicating that E1455 participates in ATP hydrolysis. The mutation of the corresponding D793 residue in NBD1 to a different acidic residue has little effect on ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. The replacement of D793 with a non-acidic residue, such as D793L or D793N, increases the rate of ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. Along with their higher transport activities, their Michaelis constant Kms (ATP) are also higher than that of wild-type. Coincident with their higher Kms (ATP), their Kds derived from ATP binding are also higher than that of wild-type, implying that the rate of dissociation of the bound nucleotide from the mutated NBD1 is faster than that of wild-type. Therefore, regardless of whether the bound ATP at NBD1 is hydrolyzed or not, the release of the bound nucleotide from NBD1 may bring the molecule back to its original conformation and facilitate the protein to start a new cycle of ATP-dependent solute transport.  相似文献   

13.
GSH inhibits trypsinization of the C-terminal half of human MRP1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
MRP1 is a 190-kDa membrane glycoprotein that confers multidrug resistance to tumor cells. The accumulated evidence has proved that GSH interacts with MRP1 and stimulates drug transport. However, the mechanism of GSH-dependent drug transport by MRP1 remains unclear. In this study, we used limited tryptic digestion of MRP1 in isolated membrane vesicles, in the presence and absence of GSH, to investigate the influence of GSH on MRP1 conformation. We found that GSH inhibited the generation of an approximately 35-kDa C-terminal tryptic fragment (including a C-terminal His tag) termed C2 from MRP1. This effect of GSH was not because of direct inhibition of trypsin activity, and agosterol A enhanced the inhibitory effect of GSH. The main cleavage site in MRP1 for the generation of the C2 fragment by trypsin resided between TMD2 and NBD2 of MRP1. Limited tryptic digestion of membrane vesicles expressing various truncated and co-expressed MRP1 fragments in the presence and absence of GSH revealed that GSH inhibited the production of the C2 fragment only in the presence of the L(0) region of MRP1. Thus the L(0) region is required for the inhibition of trypsinization of the C-terminal half of MRP1 by GSH. These findings, together with previous reports, suggest that GSH induces a conformational change at a site within the MRP1 that is indispensable for the interaction of MRP1 with its substrates.  相似文献   

14.
MRP1 couples ATP binding/hydrolysis to solute transport. We have shown that ATP binding to nucleotide-binding-domain 1 (NBD1) plays a regulatory role whereas ATP hydrolysis at NBD2 plays a crucial role in ATP-dependent solute transport. However, how ATP is hydrolyzed at NBD2 is not well elucidated. To partially address this question, we have mutated the histidine residue in H-loop of MRP1 to either a residue that prevents the formation of hydrogen-bonds with ATP and other residues in MRP1 or a residue that may potentially form these hydrogen-bonds. Interestingly, substitution of H827 in NBD1 with residues that prevented formation of these hydrogen-bonds had no effect on the ATP-dependent solute transport whereas corresponding mutations in NBD2 almost abolished the ATP-dependent solute transport completely. In contrast, substitutions of H1486 in H-loop of NBD2 with residues that might potentially form these hydrogen-bonds exerted either full function or partial function, implying that hydrogen-bond formation between the residue at 1486 and the γ-phosphate of the bound ATP and/or other residues, such as putative catalytic base E1455, together with S769, G771, T1329 and K1333, etc., holds all the components necessary for ATP binding/hydrolysis firmly so that the activated water molecule can efficiently hydrolyze the bound ATP at NBD2.  相似文献   

15.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters couple the binding and hydrolysis of ATP to the translocation of solutes across biological membranes. The so-called "Walker motifs" in each of the nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) of these proteins contribute directly to the binding and the catalytic site for the MgATP substrate. Hence mutagenesis of residues in these motifs may interfere with function. This is the case with the MRP1 multidrug transporter. However, interpretation of the effect of mutation in the Walker B motif of NBD1 (D792L/D793L) was confused by the fact that it prevented biosynthetic maturation of the protein. We have determined now that this latter effect is entirely due to the D792L substitution. This variant is unable to mature conformationally as evidenced by its remaining more sensitive to trypsin digestion in vitro than the mature wild-type protein. In vivo, the core-glycosylated form of that mutant is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum and degraded by the proteasome. A different substitution of the same residue (D792A) had a less severe effect enabling accumulation of approximately equal amounts of mature and immature MRP1 proteins in the membrane vesicles but still resulted in defective nucleotide interaction and organic anion transport, indicating that nucleotide hydrolysis at NBD1 is essential to MRP1 function.  相似文献   

16.
MRP1 couples ATP binding/hydrolysis to solute transport. We have shown that ATP binding to nucleotide-binding-domain 1 (NBD1) plays a regulatory role whereas ATP hydrolysis at NBD2 plays a crucial role in ATP-dependent solute transport. However, how ATP is hydrolyzed at NBD2 is not well elucidated. To partially address this question, we have mutated the histidine residue in H-loop of MRP1 to either a residue that prevents the formation of hydrogen-bonds with ATP and other residues in MRP1 or a residue that may potentially form these hydrogen-bonds. Interestingly, substitution of H827 in NBD1 with residues that prevented formation of these hydrogen-bonds had no effect on the ATP-dependent solute transport whereas corresponding mutations in NBD2 almost abolished the ATP-dependent solute transport completely. In contrast, substitutions of H1486 in H-loop of NBD2 with residues that might potentially form these hydrogen-bonds exerted either full function or partial function, implying that hydrogen-bond formation between the residue at 1486 and the gamma-phosphate of the bound ATP and/or other residues, such as putative catalytic base E1455, together with S769, G771, T1329 and K1333, etc., holds all the components necessary for ATP binding/hydrolysis firmly so that the activated water molecule can efficiently hydrolyze the bound ATP at NBD2.  相似文献   

17.
Yang R  Scavetta R  Chang XB 《Biochemistry》2008,47(32):8456-8464
Structural analysis of human MRP1-NBD1 revealed that the Walker A S685 forms a hydrogen bond with the Walker B D792 and interacts with the Mg (2+) cofactor and the beta-phosphate of the bound Mg.ATP. We have found that substitution of the S685 with an amino acid that potentially prevents the formation of the hydrogen bond resulted in misfolding of the protein and significantly affect the ATP-dependent leukotriene C4 (LTC4) transport. In this report we tested whether the corresponding substitution in NBD2 would also result in misfolding of the protein. In contrast to the NBD1 mutations, none of the mutations in NBD2, including S1334A, S1334C, S1334D, S1334H, S1334N, and S1334T, caused misfolding of the protein. However, elimination of the hydroxyl group at S1334 in mutations including S1334A, S1334C, S1334D, S1334H, and S1334N drastically reduced the ATP binding and the ATP-enhanced ADP trapping at the mutated NBD2. Due to this low efficient ATP binding at the mutated NBD2, the inhibitory effect of ATP on the LTC4 binding is significantly decreased. Furthermore, ATP bound to the mutated NBD2 cannot be efficiently hydrolyzed, leading to almost completely abolishing the ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. In contrast, S1334T mutation, which retained the hydroxyl group at this position, exerts higher LTC4 transport activity than the wild-type MRP1, indicating that the hydroxyl group at this position plays a crucial role for ATP binding/hydrolysis and ATP-dependent solute transport.  相似文献   

18.
Human multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) is a membrane protein that belongs to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of transport proteins. MRP1 contributes to chemotherapy failure by exporting a wide range of anti-cancer drugs when over expressed in the plasma membrane of cells. Here, we report the first high-resolution crystal structure of human MRP1-NBD1. Drug efflux requires energy resulting from hydrolysis of ATP by nucleotide binding domains (NBDs). Contrary to the prokaryotic NBDs, the extremely low intrinsic ATPase activity of isolated MRP1-NBDs allowed us to obtain the structure of wild-type NBD1 in complex with Mg2+/ATP. The structure shows that MRP1-NBD1 adopts a canonical fold, but reveals an unexpected non-productive conformation of the catalytic site, providing an explanation for the low intrinsic ATPase activity of NBD1 and new hypotheses on the cooperativity of ATPase activity between NBD1 and NBD2 upon heterodimer formation.  相似文献   

19.
Nucleotide dissociation from NBD1 promotes solute transport by MRP1   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
MRP1 transports glutathione-S-conjugated solutes in an ATP-dependent manner by utilizing its two NBDs to bind and hydrolyze ATP. We have found that ATP binding to NBD1 plays a regulatory role whereas ATP hydrolysis at NBD2 plays a dominant role in ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. However, whether ATP hydrolysis at NBD1 is required for the transport was not clear. We now report that ATP hydrolysis at NBD1 may not be essential for transport, but that the dissociation of the NBD1-bound nucleotide facilitates ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. These conclusions are supported by the following results. The substitution of the putative catalytic E1455 with a non-acidic residue in NBD2 greatly decreases the ATPase activity of NBD2 and the ATP-dependent LTC4 transport, indicating that E1455 participates in ATP hydrolysis. The mutation of the corresponding D793 residue in NBD1 to a different acidic residue has little effect on ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. The replacement of D793 with a non-acidic residue, such as D793L or D793N, increases the rate of ATP-dependent LTC4 transport. Along with their higher transport activities, their Michaelis constant Kms (ATP) are also higher than that of wild-type. Coincident with their higher Kms (ATP), their Kds derived from ATP binding are also higher than that of wild-type, implying that the rate of dissociation of the bound nucleotide from the mutated NBD1 is faster than that of wild-type. Therefore, regardless of whether the bound ATP at NBD1 is hydrolyzed or not, the release of the bound nucleotide from NBD1 may bring the molecule back to its original conformation and facilitate the protein to start a new cycle of ATP-dependent solute transport.  相似文献   

20.
Resistance to multiple natural product drugs associated with reduced drug accumulation in human tumor cells may be conferred by either the 170 kDa P-glycoprotein or the 190 kDa multidrug resistance protein, MRP. Both MRP and P-glycoprotein belong to the large and ancient ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of transport proteins but share only 15% amino acid identity. Unlike P-glycoprotein, MRP actively transports conjugated organic anions such as the cysteinyl leukotriene C4 and glutathione-conjugated aflatoxin B1. Transport of unconjugated chemotherapeutic agents appears to require cotransport of glutathione. MRP and several more recently discovered ABC proteins contain an additional NH2-proximal membrane-spanning domain not found in previously characterized ABC transporters. This domain, whose NH2-terminus is extracytosolic, is essential for MRP-mediated transport activity. This review summarizes current knowledge of the structural and transport characteristics of MRP which suggest that the physiologic functions of this protein could range from a protective role in chemical toxicity and oxidative stress to mediation of inflammatory responses involving cysteinyl leukotrienes. BioEssays 20:931–940, 1998. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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