Back to Search Start Over

An ABC transporter with a secondary-active multidrug translocator domain

Authors :
Saroj Velamakanni
Henrietta Venter
Hendrik W. van Veen
Richard A. Shilling
Lekshmy Balakrishnan
Source :
Nature. 426(6968)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Multidrug resistance, by which cells become resistant to multiple unrelated pharmaceuticals, is due to the extrusion of drugs from the cell's interior by active transporters such as the human multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein. Two major classes of transporters mediate this extrusion. Primary-active transporters are dependent on ATP hydrolysis, whereas secondary-active transporters are driven by electrochemical ion gradients that exist across the plasma membrane. The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter LmrA is a primary drug transporter in Lactococcus lactis that can functionally substitute for P-glycoprotein in lung fibroblast cells. Here we have engineered a truncated LmrA protein that lacks the ATP-binding domain. Surprisingly, this truncated protein mediates a proton-ethidium symport reaction without the requirement for ATP. In other words, it functions as a secondary-active multidrug uptake system. These findings suggest that the evolutionary precursor of LmrA was a secondary-active substrate translocator that acquired an ATP-binding domain to enable primary-active multidrug efflux in L. lactis.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
426
Issue :
6968
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50b1113a43353effcaac6e787021ae97