Abstract

The 190-kDa multidrug resistance protein (MRP) has recently been associated with the transport of cysteinyl leukotrienes and several glutathione (GSH) S-conjugates. In the present study, we have examined the transport of leukotriene C4 (LTC4) in membrane vesicles from MRP-transfected HeLa cells (T14), as well as drug-selected H69AR lung cancer cells which express high levels of MRP. V(max) and K(m) values for LTC4 transport by membrane vesicles from T14 cells were 529 +/- 176 pmol mg(-1) min(-1) and 105 +/- 31 nM, respectively. At 50 nM LTC4, the K(m) (ATP) was 70 micron. Transport in T14 vesicles was osmotically-sensitive and was supported by various nucleoside triphosphates but not by non- or slowly-hydrolyzable ATP analogs. LTC4 transport rates in membrane vesicles derived from H69AR cells and their parental and revertant variants were consistent with their relative levels of MRP expression. A 190-kDa protein in T14 membrane vesicles was photolabeled by [3H]LTC4 and immunoprecipitation with MRP-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) confirmed that this protein was MRP. LTC4 transport was inhibited by an MRP-specific mAb (QCRL-3) directed against an intracellular conformational epitope of MRP, but not by a mAb (QCRL-1) which recognizes a linear epitope. Photolabeling with [3H]LTC4 was also inhibitable by mAb QCRL-3 but not mAb QCRL-1. GSH did not inhibit LTC4 transport. However, the ability of alkylated GSH derivatives to inhibit transport increased markedly with the length of the alkyl group. S-Decylglutathione was a potent competitive inhibitor of [3H]LTC4 transport (K(i(app)) 116 nM), suggesting that the two compounds bind to the same, or closely related, site(s) on MRP. Chemotherapeutic agents including colchicine, doxorubicin, and daunorubicin were poor inhibitors of [3H]LTC4 transport. Taxol, VP-16, vincristine, and vinblastine were also poor inhibitors of LTC4 transport but inhibition by these compounds was enhanced by GSH. Uptake of [3H]vincristine into T14 membrane vesicles in the absence of GSH was low and not dependent on ATP. However, in the presence of GSH, ATP-dependent vincristine transport was observed. Levels of transport increased with concentrations of GSH up to 5 mM. The identification of an MRP-specific mAb that inhibits LTC4 transport and prevents photolabeling of MRP by LTC4, provides conclusive evidence of the ability of MRP to transport cysteinyl leukotrienes. Our studies also demonstrate that MRP is capable of mediating ATP-dependent transport of vincristine and that transport is GSH-dependent.

Highlights

  • The 190-kDa multidrug resistance protein (MRP) has recently been associated with the transport of cysteinyl leukotrienes and several glutathione (GSH) S-conjugates

  • The correlation between leukotriene C4 (LTC4) transport and levels of MRP expression was examined by measuring rates of LTC4 uptake in vesicles isolated from drug-sensitive H69, drug-resistant H69AR, and revertant H69PR cells

  • In the presence of 1, 3, and 5 mM GSH, steady state levels of ATP-dependent VCR uptake in T14 vesicles were increased to approximately 15, 22, and 31 pmol mgϪ1, respectively, at 20 min. 2-Mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, or L-cysteine did not increase VCR uptake, indicating that it was not the reducing capacity of GSH that was responsible for the increase in VCR uptake (Fig. 7B). [3H]VCR uptake by T14 vesicles was osmotically-sensitive and was inhibitable by 500 ␮M GSSG (23 Ϯ 5% control), and 200 ␮M N-ethylmaleimide (45 Ϯ 5% control), but not by 200 ␮M vanadate (85 Ϯ 8% control), consistent with the effect of these reagents on LTC4 transport. Both P-glycoprotein and MRP are capable of causing resistance to a similar spectrum of drugs when overexpressed in mammalian cells [1, 8]

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Summary

Introduction

The 190-kDa multidrug resistance protein (MRP) has recently been associated with the transport of cysteinyl leukotrienes and several glutathione (GSH) S-conjugates. Some insight into the normal physiological role of MRP has been obtained by the demonstration that membrane vesicles from MRP-overexpressing drug-selected and transfected cells support ATP-dependent transport of cysteinyl leukotrienes (e.g. LTC4) and certain other GSH S-conjugates (10 –12).

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