摘要

The most common cause of cystic fibrosis is misfolding of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein because of deletion of residue Phe508 (DeltaF508). P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an ideal model protein for studying how mutations disrupt folding of ATP-binding cassette proteins such as CFTR because specific chemical chaperones can be used to correct folding defects. Interactions between the nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) are critical because ATP binds at the interface between the NBDs. Here, we used disulfide cross-linking between cysteines in the Walker A sites and the LSGGQ signature sequences to test whether processing mutations located throughout P-gp disrupted interactions between the NBDs. We found that mutations present in the cytoplasmic loops, transmembrane segments, and linker regions or deletion of Tyr-490 (equivalent to Phe-508 in CFTR) inhibited crosslinking between the NBDs. Deletion of Phe-508 in the P-gp/CFTR chimera also inhibited cross-linking between the NBDs. Cross-linking was restored, however, when the mutants were expressed in the presence of the chemical chaperone cyclosporin A. The "rescued" mutants exhibited drug-stimulated ATPase activity, and cross-linking between the NBDs was inhibited by vanadate trapping of nucleotide. These results together with our previous findings (Loo, T. W., Bartlett, M. C., and Clarke, D. M. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 27585-27588) indicate that processing mutations disrupt interactions among all four domains. It appears that cross-talk between the cytoplasmic and the transmembrane domains is required for establishment of proper domain-domain interactions that occur during folding of ATP-binding cassette protein transporters.

  • 出版日期2004-9-10