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Long-range communication between transmembrane- and nucleotide-binding domains does not depend on drug binding to mutant P-glycoprotein

Authors :
Cátia A. Bonito
Ricardo J. Ferreira
Maria-José.U. Ferreira
Jean-Pierre Gillet
M. Natália D. S. Cordeiro
Daniel J. V. A. dos Santos
Source :
Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics. :1-10
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2023.

Abstract

The modulation of drug efflux by P-glycoprotein (P-gp, ABCB1) represents one of the most promising approaches to overcome multidrug resistance (MDR) in cancer cells, however the mechanisms of drug specificity and signal-transmission are still poorly understood, hampering the development of more selective and efficient P-gp modulators. In this study, the impact of four P-gp mutations (G185V, G830V, F978A and ΔF335) on drug-binding and efflux-related signal-transmission mechanism was comprehensively evaluated in the presence of ligands within the drug-binding pocket (DBP), which are experimentally related with changes in their drug efflux profiles. The severe repacking of the transmembrane helices (TMH), induced by mutations and exacerbated by the presence of ligands, indicates that P-gp is sensitive to perturbations in the transmembrane region. Alterations on drug-binding were also observed as a consequence of the TMH repacking, but were not always correlated with alterations on ligands binding mode and/or binding affinity. Finally, and although all P-gp variants holo systems showed considerable changes in the intracellular coupling helices/nucleotide-binding domain (ICH-NBD) interactions, they seem to be primarily induced by the mutation itself rather than by the presence of ligands within the DBP. The data further suggest that the changes in drug efflux experimentally reported are mostly related with changes on drug specificity rather than effects on signal-transmission mechanism. We also hypothesize that an increase in the drug-binding affinity may also be related with the decreased drug efflux, while minor changes in binding affinities are possibly related with the increased drug efflux observed in transfected cells.

Details

ISSN :
15380254 and 07391102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c38fd2bfe0c7f124b657fe3ee6e0a433
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/07391102.2023.2181633