Reversing the direction of drug transport mediated by the human multidrug transporter P-glycoprotein

P-glycoprotein (P-gp), also known as ABCB1, is a cell membrane transporter that mediates the efflux of chemically dissimilar amphipathic drugs and confers resistance to chemotherapy in most cancers. Homologous transmembrane helices (TMHs) 6 and 12 of human P-gp connect the transmembrane domains with...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 117; no. 47; pp. 29609 - 29617
Main Authors Sajid, Andaleeb, Lusvarghi, Sabrina, Murakami, Megumi, Chufan, Eduardo E., Abel, Biebele, Gottesman, Michael M., Durell, Stewart R., Ambudkar, Suresh V.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 24.11.2020
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Summary:P-glycoprotein (P-gp), also known as ABCB1, is a cell membrane transporter that mediates the efflux of chemically dissimilar amphipathic drugs and confers resistance to chemotherapy in most cancers. Homologous transmembrane helices (TMHs) 6 and 12 of human P-gp connect the transmembrane domains with its nucleotide-binding domains, and several residues in these TMHs contribute to the drug-binding pocket. To investigate the role of these helices in the transport function of P-gp, we substituted a group of 14 conserved residues (seven in both TMHs 6 and 12) with alanine and generated a mutant termed 14A. Although the 14A mutant lost the ability to pump most of the substrates tested out of cancer cells, surprisingly, it acquired a new function. It was able to import four substrates, including rhodamine 123 (Rh123) and the taxol derivative flutax-1. Similar to the efflux function of wild-type P-gp, we found that uptake by the 14A mutant is ATP hydrolysis-, substrate concentration-, and time-dependent. Consistent with the uptake function, the mutant P-gp also hypersensitizes HeLa cells to Rh123 by 2- to 2.5-fold. Further mutagenesis identified residues from both TMHs 6 and 12 that synergistically form a switch in the central region of the two helices that governs whether a given substrate is pumped out of or into the cell. Transforming P-gp or an ABC drug exporter from an efflux transporter into a drug uptake pump would constitute a paradigm shift in efforts to overcome cancer drug resistance.
Bibliography:Author contributions: A.S., S.L., E.E.C., and S.V.A. designed research; A.S., S.L., M.M., E.E.C., and B.A. performed research; A.S., S.L., M.M., E.E.C., and B.A. analyzed data; S.R.D. carried out in silico studies including molecular dynamics simulations; A.S., S.L., M.M.G., S.R.D., and S.V.A. wrote the paper; and S.V.A. supervised the study.
Reviewers: B.B., University of Kentucky; and C.V.S., Purdue University.
Contributed by Michael M. Gottesman, September 30, 2020 (sent for review July 31, 2020; reviewed by Björn Bauer and Cynthia Vianne Stauffacher)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2016270117