4.8 Article

Placing steroid hormones within the human ABCC3 transporter reveals a compatible amphiphilic substrate-binding pocket

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 42, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2022113415

Keywords

ABCC3; cryo-EM; hormone; multidrug resistance; substrate-binding pattern

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The human ABC transporter ABCC3 is responsible for transporting a wide range of substances, including endogenous metabolites and drugs. Its dysfunction is associated with various diseases such as intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy. The study provides structural insights into the substrate binding pocket of ABCC3, which can hold conjugated hormones in an asymmetric pattern and may be used for designing inhibitors.
The human ABC transporter ABCC3 (also known as MRP3) transports a wide spectrum of substrates, including endogenous metabolites and exogenous drugs. Accordingly, it participates in multiple physiological processes and is involved in diverse human diseases such as intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, which is caused by the intracellular accumulation of bile acids and estrogens. Here, we report three cryogenic electron microscopy structures of ABCC3: in the apo-form and in complexed forms bound to either the conjugated sex hormones & beta;-estradiol 17-(& beta;-D-glucuronide) and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate. For both hormones, the steroid nuclei that superimpose against each other occupy the hydrophobic center of the transport cavity, whereas the two conjugation groups are separated and fixed by the hydrophilic patches in two transmembrane domains. Structural analysis combined with site-directed mutagenesis and ATPase activity assays revealed that ABCC3 possesses an amphiphilic substrate-binding pocket able to hold either conjugated hormone in an asymmetric pattern. These data build on consensus features of the substrate-binding pocket of MRPs and provide a structural platform for the rational design of inhibitors.

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