4.4 Article

The p-glycoprotein (ABCB1) linker domain encodes high-affinity binding sequences to α- and β-Tubulins

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 46, Issue 25, Pages 7337-7342

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi7006228

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P-Glycoprotein (or ABCB1) has been shown to cause multidrug resistance in tumor cell lines selected with lipophilic anticancer drugs. ABCB1 encodes a duplicated molecule with two hydrophobic and hydrophilic domains linked by a highly charged region of similar to 90 amino acids, the linker domain with as yet unknown function(s). In this report, we demonstrate a role for this domain in binding to other cellular proteins. Using overlapping hexapeptides that encode the entire amino acid sequence of the linker domain of human ABCB1, we show a direct and specific binding between sequences in the linker domain and several intracellular proteins. Three different polypeptide sequences [(617)EKGIYFKLVTM(627) (LDS617-627), (657)SRSSLIRKRSTRRSVRGSQA(676) (LDS657-676), and (PVSFWRIMKLNLT705)-P-693 (LDS693-705)] in the linker domain interacted tightly with several proteins with apparent molecular masses of similar to 80, 57, and 30 kDa. Interestingly, only the 57 kDa protein (or P57) interacted with all three different sequences of the linker domain. Purification and partial N-terminal amino acid sequencing of P57 showed that it encodes the N-terminal amino acids of alpha- and beta-tubulins. The identity of the P57 interacting protein as tubulins was further confirmed by Western blotting using monoclonal antibodies to alpha- and beta-tubulin. Taken together, the results of this study provide the first evidence for ABCB1 protein interaction mediated by sequences in the linker domain. These findings are likely to provide further insight into the functions of ABCB1 in normal and drug resistant tumor cells.

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