4.6 Article

Major photoaffinity drug binding sites in multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) are within transmembrane domains 10-11 and 16-17

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 15, Pages 12324-12330

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M009782200

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MRP1 is an ABC (or ATP binding cassette) membrane transport protein shown to confer resistance to structurally dissimilar drugs, Studies of MRP1 topology suggested the presence of a hydrophobic N-domain with five potential membrane-spanning domains linked to an MDR1-like core (MSD1-NBD1-L1-MSD2-NBD2) by an intracellular linker domain (LO). MRP1-mediated multidrug resistance is thought to be due to enhanced drug efflux. However, little is known about MRP1-drug interaction and its drug binding site(s). We previously developed several photoreactive probes to study MRP1-drug interactions. In this report, we have used eight MRP1-HA variants that were modified to have hemagglutinin A (HA) epitopes inserted at different sites in MRP1 sequence. Exhaustive in-gel digestion of all IAARh123 photoaffinity-labeled MRP1-HA variants revealed the same profile of photolabeled peptides as seen for wild type MRP1. Photolabeling of the different MRP1-HA variants followed by digestion with increasing concentrations of trypsin or Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease (1:800 to 1:5 w/w) and immunoprecipitation with anti-HA mAb identified two small photolabeled peptides (similar to6-7 kDa) from MRP1-HA(574) and MRP1-HA(1222). Based on the location of the HA epitopes in the latter variants together with molecular masses of the two peptides, the photolabeled amino acid residues were localized to MRP1 sequences encoding transmembranes 10 and 11 of MSD1 (Ser(542)-Arg(593)) and transmembranes 16 and 17 of MSD2 (Cys(1205)-Glu(1253)). Interestingly, the same sequences in MRP1 were also photolabeled with a structurally different photoreactive drug, IACI, confirming the significance of transmembranes 10, 11, 16 and 17 in MRP1 drug binding. Taken together, the results in this study provide the first delineation of the drug binding site(s) of MRP1. Furthermore, our findings suggest the presence of common drug binding site(s) for structurally dissimilar drugs.

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