P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is a polyspecific ATP-dependent transporter linked to multidrug resistance in cancer; it plays important roles in determining the pharmacokinetics of many drugs. Understanding the structural basis of P-gp, substrate polyspecificity has been hampered by its intrinsic flexibility, which is facilitated by a 75-residue linker that connects the two halves of P-gp. Here we constructed a mutant murine P-gp with a shortened linker to facilitate structural determination. Despite dramatic reduction in rhodamine 123 and calcein-AM transport, the linker-shortened mutant P-gp possesses basal ATPase activity and binds ATP only in its N-terminal nucleotide-binding domain. Nine independently determined structures of wild type, the linker mutant, and a methylated P-gp at up to 3.3Å resolution display significant movements of individual transmembrane domain helices, which correlated with the opening and closing motion of the two halves of P-gp. The open-andclose motion alters the surface topology of P-gp within the drugbinding pocket, providing a mechanistic explanation for the polyspecificity of P-gp in substrate interactions.
CITATION STYLE
Esser, L., Zhou, F., Pluchino, K. M., Shiloach, J., Ma, J., Tang, W. K., … Xia, D. (2017). Structures of the Multidrug Transporter P-glycoprotein Reveal Asymmetric ATP Binding and the Mechanism of Polyspecificity. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 292(2), 446–461. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.755884
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