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Molecular Basis of Substrate Polyspecificity of the Candida albicans Mdr1p Multidrug/H+ Antiporter
Authors:Archana Kumari Redhu  Atanu Banerjee  Abdul Haseeb Shah  Alexis Moreno  Manpreet Kaur Rawal  Remya Nair  Pierre Falson  Rajendra Prasad
Affiliation:1. School of Life Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India;2. Department of Bioresources, University of Kashmir, Srinagar 190006, India;3. Drug Resistance & Membrane proteins team, Molecular Microbiology and Structural Biochemistry Laboratory, CNRS-Lyon 1 University Research lab n° 5086, Institut de Biologie et Chimie des Protéines, Lyon, France;4. Gargi College, University of Delhi, Delhi, India;5. RGIT&BT, Bharati Vidyapeeth University, Pune, India;6. Amity Institute of Integrative Sciences and Health and Amity Institute of Biotechnology, Gurgaon, India
Abstract:The molecular basis of polyspecificity of Mdr1p, a major drug/H+ antiporter of Candida albicans, is not elucidated. We have probed the nature of the drug-binding pocket by performing systematic mutagenesis of the 12 transmembrane segments. Replacement of the 252 amino acid residues with alanine or glycine yielded 2/3 neutral mutations while 1/3 led to the complete or selective loss of resistance to drugs or substrates transported by the pump. Using the GlpT-based 3D–model of Mdr1p, we roughly categorized these critical residues depending on their type and localization, 1°/ main structural impact (“S” group), 2°/ exposure to the lipid interface (“L” group), 3°/ buried but not facing the main central pocket, inferred as critical for the overall H+/drug antiport mechanism (“M” group) and finally 4°/ buried and facing the main central pocket (“B” group). Among “B” category, 13 residues were essential for the large majority of drugs/substrates, while 5 residues were much substrate-specific, suggesting a role in governing polyspecificity (P group). 3D superposition of the substrate-specific MFS Glut1 and XylE with the MDR substrate-polyspecific MdfA and Mdr1p revealed that the B group forms a common substrate interaction core while the P group is only found in the 2 MDR MFS transporters, distributed into 3 areas around the B core. This specific pattern has let us to propose that the structural basis for polyspecificity of MDR MFS transporters is the extended capacity brought by residues located at the periphery of a binding core to accomodate compounds differing in size and type.
Keywords:MFS  Major Facilitator Superfamily  DHA-1  Mdr1p  Multidrug resistance 1 protein  TMS  Transmembrane segment  TMD  Transmembrane domain  FLC  Fluconazole  CHX  Cycloheximide  MTX  Methotrexate  4-NQO  4-Nitroquinoline  DMSO  Dimethylsulfoxide  NR  Nile red  WT  Wild type  RFU  Relative Fluorescence Units  PM  Plasma membrane  Mdr1  Multidrug resistance  Polyspecificity  MFS
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