Conserved Walker A Ser Residues in the Catalytic Sites of P-glycoprotein Are Critical for Catalysis and Involved Primarily at the Transition State Step
P-glycoprotein mutants S430A/T and S1073A/T, affecting conserved Walker A Ser residues, were characterized to elucidate molecular roles of the Ser and functioning of the two P-glycoprotein catalytic sites. Results showed the Ser-OH is critical for MgATPase activity and formation of the normal transi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2000-08, Vol.275 (32), p.25031-25038 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | P-glycoprotein mutants S430A/T and S1073A/T, affecting conserved Walker A Ser residues, were characterized to elucidate molecular roles of the Ser and functioning of the two P-glycoprotein catalytic sites. Results showed the Ser-OH is critical for MgATPase activity and formation of the normal transition state, although not for initial MgATP binding. Mutation to Ala in either catalytic site abolished MgATPase and transition state formation in both sites, whereas Thr mutants had similar MgATPase to wild-type. Trapping of 1 mol of MgADP/mol of P-glycoprotein by vanadate, shown here with pure protein, yielded full inhibition of ATPase. Thus, congruent with previous work, both sites must be intact and must interact for catalysis. Equivalent mutations (Ala or Thr) in the two catalytic sites had identical effects on a wide range of activities, emphasizing that the two catalytic sites function symmetrically. The role of the Ser-OH is to coordinate Mg2+ in MgATP, but only at the stage of the transition state are its effects tangible. Initial substrate binding is apparently to an “open” catalytic site conformation, where the Ser-OH is dispensable. This changes to a “closed” conformation required to attain the transition state, in which the Ser-OH is a critical ligand. Formation of the latter conformation requires both sites; both sites may provide direct ligands to the transition state. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M003962200 |