Characterization of the human multidrug resistance protein containing mutations in the ATP-binding cassette signature region

Author:

BAKOS Éva1,KLEIN Izabella1,WELKER Ervin12,SZABÓ Katalin12,MÜLLER Marianna2,SARKADI Balázs2,VÁRADI András1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Enzymology, Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-1113 Budapest, Hungary

2. National Institute of Haematology and Immunology, and Membrane Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-1113 Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

A number of mutants with single amino acid replacements were generated in the highly conserved ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-signature region (amino acids 531–543) of the N-terminal half of the human multidrug resistance (MDR1) protein. The cDNA variants were inserted into recombinant baculoviruses and the MDR1 proteins were expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells. The level of expression and membrane insertion of the MDR1 variants was examined by immunostaining, and MDR1 function was followed by measuring drug-stimulated ATPase activity. We found that two mutations, L531R and G534V, practically eliminated MDR1 expression; thus these amino acid replacements seem to inhibit the formation of a stable MDR1 protein structure. The MDR1 variants G534D and I541R were expressed at normal levels with normal membrane insertion, but showed a complete loss of drug-stimulated ATPase activity, while mutant R538M yielded full protein expression but with greatly decreased ATPase activity. Increasing the ATP concentration did not restore MDR1 ATPase activity in these variants. Some amino acid replacements in the ABC-signature region (K536I, K536R, I541T and R543S) affected neither the expression and membrane insertion nor the ATPase function of MDR1. We found no alteration in the drug-sensitivity of ATP cleavage in any of the MDR1 variants that had measurable ATPase activity. These observations suggest that the ABC-signature region is essential for MDR1 protein stability and function, but alterations in this region do not seem to modulate MDR1–drug interactions directly.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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