Structural insight into substrate and inhibitor discrimination by human P-glycoprotein

Authors
Amer AlamJulia KowalKaspar Locher
Journal
Science
Published
February 15, 2019

Abstract

To transport or not to transport Therapeutic drug delivery into cells is complicated by membrane proteins like ABCB1 (also termed P-glycoprotein) that shuttle diverse compounds out of cells. Alam et al. determined high-resolution cryo–electron microscopy structures of ABCB1 bound either to a substrate, the cancer drug Taxol, or to the ABCB1 inhibitor zosuquidar. The conformational changes that facilitate drug transport are caused by hydrolysis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). The structures show that, although Taxol and zosquidar bind to the same site, subtle structural differences lead to altered conformations of the nucleotide binding domains that are responsible for ATP hydrolysis. Science , this issue p. 753

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DOI

10.1126/science.aav7102

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Structural insight into substrate and inhibitor discrimination by human P-glycoprotein