Literature DB >> 7665554

Rapid purification of human P-glycoprotein mutants expressed transiently in HEK 293 cells by nickel-chelate chromatography and characterization of their drug-stimulated ATPase activities.

T W Loo1, D M Clarke.   

Abstract

P-glycoprotein containing 10 tandem histidine residues at the COOH end of the molecule was transiently expressed in HEK 293 cells and purified by nickel-chelate chromatography. The purified protein had an apparent mass of 170 kDa, and its verapamil-stimulated ATPase activity in the presence of phospholipid was 1.2 mumol/min/mg of P-glycoprotein. We then characterized P-glycoprotein mutants that exhibited altered drug-resistant phenotypes and analyzed the contribution of the two nucleotide binding folds to drug-stimulated ATPase activity. Mutation of residues in either nucleotide binding fold abolished drug-stimulated ATPase activity. The pattern of drug-stimulated ATPase activities of mutants, which conferred increased relative resistance to colchicine (G141V, G185V, G830V) or decreased relative resistance to all drugs (F978A), correlated with their drug-resistant phenotypes. By contrast, the ATPase activity of mutant F335A was significantly higher than that of wild-type enzyme when assayed in the presence of verapamil (3.4-fold), colchicine (9.1-fold), or vinblastine (3.7-fold), even though it conferred little resistance to vinblastine in transfected cells. These results suggest that both nucleotide-binding domains must be intact to couple drug binding to ATPase activity and that the drug-stimulated ATPase activity profile of a mutant does not always correlate with its drug-resistant phenotype.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7665554     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.270.37.21449

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  40 in total

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9.  Identification of the distance between the homologous halves of P-glycoprotein that triggers the high/low ATPase activity switch.

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