Communication between Multiple Drug Binding Sites on P-glycoprotein
- Catherine Martin1,
- Georgina Berridge1,
- Christopher F. Higgins2,
- Prakash Mistry3,
- Peter Charlton3 and
- Richard Callaghan1
- 1Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, United Kingdom (C.M., G.B., R.C.); 2MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College School of Medicine, Hammersmith Hospital, London, United Kingdom (C.F.H.); and 3Xenova Limited, Slough, United Kingdom (P.M., P.C.).
Abstract
P-glycoprotein, a member of the ATP-binding cassette transporter family, is able to confer resistance on tumors against a large number of functionally and chemically distinct cytotoxic compounds. Several recent investigations suggest that P-glycoprotein contains multiple drug binding sites rather than a single site of broad substrate specificity. In the present study, radioligand-binding techniques were used to directly characterize drug interaction sites on P-glycoprotein and how these multiple sites interact. The drugs used were classified as either 1) substrates, which are known to be transported by P-glycoprotein (e.g., vinblastine) or 2) modulators, which alter P-glycoprotein function but are not themselves transported by the protein (e.g., XR9576). Drug interactions with P-glycoprotein were either competitive, at a common site, or noncompetitive, and therefore at distinct sites. Based on these data, we can assign a minimum of four drug binding sites on P-glycoprotein. These sites fall into two categories: transport, at which translocation of drug across the membrane can occur, and regulatory sites, which modify P-glycoprotein function. Intriguingly, however, some modulators interact with P-glycoprotein at a transport site rather than a regulatory site. The pharmacological data also demonstrate that both transport and regulatory sites are able to switch between high- and low-affinity conformations. The multiple sites on P-glycoprotein display complex allosteric interactions through which interaction of drug at one site switches other sites between high- or low-affinity conformations. The data are discussed in terms of a model for the mechanism of transport by P-glycoprotein.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: Richard Callaghan, Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, OX3 9DU, UK. E-mail:richard.callaghan{at}ndcb.ox.ac.uk
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This work was supported by CRC program Grant ARG/CS SP1861/0301 and the Imperial Cancer Research Fund.
- Abbreviations:
- ABC
- ATP binding cassette
- P-gp
- P-glycoprotein
- MDR
- multidrug resistance
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- Received November 1, 1999.
- Accepted May 25, 2000.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



