4.7 Article

Mutagenic Analysis of the Putative ABCC6 Substrate-Binding Cavity Using a New Homology Model

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22136910

Keywords

ABC transporter; pseudoxanthoma elasticum; homology modeling; substrate-binding site; cellular ATP efflux; mutagenesis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AR072695]
  2. National Research, Development and Innovation Office [OTKA FK131946]
  3. Hungarian Academy of Sciences [BO/00730/19/8]
  4. Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund (UNKP-2020 New National Excellence Program)
  5. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP 133584]
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering and Research Council (Canada)
  7. Canada Research Chairs Program
  8. PXE International
  9. U.S. Department of State (Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program)

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ABCC6 inactivating mutations cause the rare hereditary mineralization disorder pseudoxanthoma elasticum. ABCC6 is proposed to be an ATP-dependent ATP efflux pump, with a potential ATP-binding site in its substrate-binding cavity.
Inactivating mutations in ABCC6 underlie the rare hereditary mineralization disorder pseudoxanthoma elasticum. ABCC6 is an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) integral membrane protein that mediates the release of ATP from hepatocytes into the bloodstream. The released ATP is extracellularly converted into pyrophosphate, a key mineralization inhibitor. Although ABCC6 is firmly linked to cellular ATP release, the molecular details of ABCC6-mediated ATP release remain elusive. Most of the currently available data support the hypothesis that ABCC6 is an ATP-dependent ATP efflux pump, an un-precedented function for an ABC transporter. This hypothesis implies the presence of an ATP-binding site in the substrate-binding cavity of ABCC6. We performed an extensive mutagenesis study using a new homology model based on recently published structures of its close homolog, bovine Abcc1, to characterize the substrate-binding cavity of ABCC6. Leukotriene C4 (LTC4), is a high-affinity substrate of ABCC1. We mutagenized fourteen amino acid residues in the rat ortholog of ABCC6, rAbcc6, that corresponded to the residues in ABCC1 found in the LTC4 binding cavity. Our functional characterization revealed that most of the amino acids in rAbcc6 corresponding to those found in the LTC4 binding pocket in bovine Abcc1 are not critical for ATP efflux. We conclude that the putative ATP binding site in the substrate-binding cavity of ABCC6/rAbcc6 is distinct from the bovine Abcc1 LTC4-binding site.

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