P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an ATP binding cassette transporter that effluxes a variety of structurally diverse compounds including anticancer drugs. Computational models of human P-gp in the apo- and nucleotide-bound conformation show that the adenine group of ATP forms hydrogen bonds with the conserved Asp-164 and Asp-805 in intracellular loops 1 and 3, respectively, which are located at the interface between the nucleotide binding domains and transmembrane domains.Weinvestigated the role of Asp-164 and Asp-805 residues by substituting them with cysteine in a cysteine- less background. It was observed that the D164C/D805C mutant, when expressed in HeLa cells, led to misprocessing of P-gp, which thus failed to transport the drug substrates. The misfolded protein could be rescued to the cell surface by growing the cells at a lower temperature (27 °C) or by treatment with substrates (cyclosporine A, FK506), modulators (tariquidar), or small corrector molecules. We also show that short term (4-6 h) treatment with 15 μM cyclosporine A or FK506 rescues the pre-formedimmature protein trapped in the endoplasmic reticulum in an immunophilin- independent pathway. The intracellularly trapped misprocessed protein associates more with chaperone Hsp70, and the treatment with cyclosporine A reduces the association of mutant P-gp, thus allowing it to be trafficked to the cell surface. The function of rescued cell surface mutant P-gp is similar to that of wildtype protein. These data demonstrate that the Asp-164 and Asp- 805 residues are not important for ATP binding, as proposed earlier, but are critical for proper folding and maturation of a functional transporter. © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Kapoor, K., Bhatnagar, J., Chufan, E. E., & Ambudkar, S. V. (2013). Mutations in intracellular loops 1 and 3 lead to misfolding of human P-glycoprotein (ABCB1) that can be rescued by cyclosporine a, which reduces its association with chaperone Hsp70. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 288(45), 32622–32636. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.498980
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