posted on 2015-11-03, 00:00authored byAdam T. Clay, Peihua Lu, Frances J. Sharom
The ABC transporter P-glycoprotein
(Pgp, ABCB1) actively exports
structurally diverse substrates from within the lipid bilayer, leading
to multidrug resistance. Many aspects of Pgp function are altered
by the phospholipid environment, but its interactions with sterols
remain enigmatic. In this work, the functional interaction between
purified Pgp and various sterols was investigated in detergent solution
and proteoliposomes. Fluorescence studies showed that dehydroergosterol,
cholestatrienol, and NBD-cholesterol interact intimately with Pgp,
resulting in both quenching of protein Trp fluorescence and enhancement
of sterol fluorescence. Kd values indicated
binding affinities in the range of 3–9 μM. Collisional
quenching experiments showed that Pgp-bound NBD-cholesterol was protected
from the external milieu, resonance energy transfer was observed between
Pgp Trp residues and the sterol, and the fluorescence emission of
bound sterol was enhanced. These observations suggested an intimate
interaction of bound sterols with the transporter at a protected nonpolar
site. Cholesterol hemisuccinate altered the thermal unfolding of Pgp
and greatly stabilized its basal ATPase activity in both a detergent
solution and reconstituted proteoliposomes of certain phospholipids.
Other sterols, including dehydroergosterol, did not stabilize the
basal ATPase activity of detergent-solubilized Pgp, which suggests
that this is not a generalized sterol effect. The phospholipid composition
and cholesterol hemisuccinate content of Pgp proteoliposomes altered
the basal ATPase and drug transport cycles differently. Sterols may
interact with Pgp and modulate its structure and function by occupying
part of the drug-binding pocket or by binding to putative consensus
cholesterol-binding (CRAC/CARC) motifs located within the transmembrane
domains.