| Literature DB >> 34993424 |
Jason Goebel1, Jean Chmielewski1, Christine A Hrycyna1.
Abstract
The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and ABCG2 are multidrug transporters that confer drug resistance to numerous anti-cancer therapeutics in cell culture. These findings initially created great excitement in the medical oncology community, as inhibitors of these transporters held the promise of overcoming clinical multidrug resistance in cancer patients. However, clinical trials of P-gp and ABCG2 inhibitors in combination with cancer chemotherapeutics have not been successful due, in part, to flawed clinical trial designs resulting from an incomplete molecular understanding of the multifactorial basis of multidrug resistance (MDR) in the cancers examined. The field was also stymied by the lack of high-resolution structural information for P-gp and ABCG2 for use in the rational structure-based drug design of inhibitors. Recent advances in structural biology have led to numerous structures of both ABCG2 and P-gp that elucidated more clearly the mechanism of transport and the polyspecific nature of their substrate and inhibitor binding sites. These data should prove useful helpful for developing even more potent and specific inhibitors of both transporters. As such, although possible pharmacokinetic interactions would need to be evaluated, these inhibitors may show greater effectiveness in overcoming ABC-dependent multidrug resistance in combination with chemotherapeutics in carefully selected subsets of cancers. Another perhaps even more compelling use of these inhibitors may be in reversibly inhibiting endogenously expressed P-gp and ABCG2, which serve a protective role at various blood-tissue barriers. Inhibition of these transporters at sanctuary sites such as the brain and gut could lead to increased penetration by chemotherapeutics used to treat brain cancers or other brain disorders and increased oral bioavailability of these agents, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: ABC transporters; ABCG2; P-glycoprotein; inhibitor; multidrug resistance
Year: 2021 PMID: 34993424 PMCID: PMC8730335 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2021.19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Figure 1Structure of P-gp and the basic mechanism of ATP hydrolysis and transport. P-gp undergoes large conformational changes in its transport mechanism. The membrane is delineated by solid black lines. Substrate from the inner leaflet first interacts with an inward-facing conformation of P-gp while two ATP molecules bind the free NBDs. The structure then adopts an occluded state with substrate bound at the apex of the TMDs while TM helices 4 and 10 significantly kink inwards, occluding the binding pocket. The outward-facing conformation is correlated with asymmetric ATP hydrolysis and solvent-exposed substrate diffusion into extracellular space before ADP release and the mechanism resetting. Adapted from PDB: 5KPI (inward)[, 7A6C (occluded)[, and 6C0V (outward)[. NBDs: Nucleotide-binding domains; TMDs: transmembrane domains.
Figure 2Cross-sections of cryo-EM structures of P-gp and ABCG2 with bound inhibitors in inward-facing conformations. The membrane is delineated by solid black lines. The extracellular space (OUT) is at the top of the image, and the intracellular space (IN) is at the bottom. (A) Cryo-EM structure of P-gp bound with two molecules of the inhibitor elacridar. One molecule (green) is bound to the drug-binding pocket while the other (cyan) passes through a smaller binding region, the vestibule, before extending into an access tunnel. (B) Cryo-EM structure of ABCG2 with bound the tariquidar analog MB136. MB136 is bound to the top of cavity 1 (green) under the leucine gate (cyan) and is believed to stop conformational changes that would allow the substrate to pass into cavity 2 (magenta) and be effluxed. Adapted from PDB: 7A6C (P-gp)[ and 6FEQ (ABCG2)[
Representative inhibitors of P-gp and ABCG2
| First generation | Cyclosporin A*, Verapamil*, Nifedipine*,†, Quinidine*, Quinine*, Tamoxifen*, Reserpine*,†, Prazosin*,†, Propafenone*,†, Erythromycin*, Itraconazole*,†, Ritonavir*,†, Benzquinamide*[ |
| Second generation | Dexverapamil*, MM36*, Valspodar*,†, BIBW22BS*, Toremifene*, Quinine Homodimer (Q2)*, S9788*,†[ |
| Third generation | Elacridar*,†, Tariquidar*,†, Zosuquidar*, Laniquidar*, Ontogen*, DP7*[ |
| Fourth generation | Natural product derivatives: Flavonoids (Curcumin*[ |
*P glycoprotein inhibitor; †ABCG2 inhibitor.