Borges-Walmsley M Ines, McKeegan Kenneth S, Walmsley Adrian R
Centre for Infectious Diseases, Department of Biological Sciences, Wolfson Research Institute, University of Durham - Stockton Campus, Stockton-on-Tees TS17 6BH, UK.
Biochem J. 2003 Dec 1;376(Pt 2):313-38. doi: 10.1042/BJ20020957.
Resistance to therapeutic drugs encompasses a diverse range of biological systems, which all have a human impact. From the relative simplicity of bacterial cells, fungi and protozoa to the complexity of human cancer cells, resistance has become problematic. Stated in its simplest terms, drug resistance decreases the chance of providing successful treatment against a plethora of diseases. Worryingly, it is a problem that is increasing, and consequently there is a pressing need to develop new and effective classes of drugs. This has provided a powerful stimulus in promoting research on drug resistance and, ultimately, it is hoped that this research will provide novel approaches that will allow the deliberate circumvention of well understood resistance mechanisms. A major mechanism of resistance in both microbes and cancer cells is the membrane protein-catalysed extrusion of drugs from the cell. Resistant cells exploit proton-driven antiporters and/or ATP-driven ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporters to extrude cytotoxic drugs that usually enter the cell by passive diffusion. Although some of these drug efflux pumps transport specific substrates, many are transporters of multiple substrates. These multidrug pumps can often transport a variety of structurally unrelated hydrophobic compounds, ranging from dyes to lipids. If we are to nullify the effects of efflux-mediated drug resistance, we must first of all understand how these efflux pumps can accommodate a diverse range of compounds and, secondly, how conformational changes in these proteins are coupled to substrate translocation. These are key questions that must be addressed. In this review we report on the advances that have been made in understanding the structure and function of drug efflux pumps.
对治疗药物的耐药性涉及多种生物系统,所有这些系统都会对人类产生影响。从细菌细胞、真菌和原生动物相对简单的结构到人类癌细胞的复杂性,耐药性已成为一个难题。简而言之,耐药性降低了成功治疗多种疾病的几率。令人担忧的是,这个问题正在加剧,因此迫切需要开发新的有效药物类别。这为促进耐药性研究提供了强大动力,最终,人们希望这项研究能提供新方法,从而能够特意规避已被充分了解的耐药机制。微生物和癌细胞耐药的一个主要机制是膜蛋白催化药物从细胞中排出。耐药细胞利用质子驱动的反向转运蛋白和/或ATP驱动的ABC(ATP结合盒)转运蛋白来排出通常通过被动扩散进入细胞的细胞毒性药物。虽然其中一些药物外排泵转运特定底物,但许多是多种底物的转运蛋白。这些多药泵通常可以转运各种结构不相关的疏水性化合物,从染料到脂质。如果我们要消除外排介导的耐药性的影响,我们首先必须了解这些外排泵如何容纳各种化合物,其次,这些蛋白质的构象变化如何与底物转运偶联。这些是必须解决的关键问题。在这篇综述中,我们报告了在理解药物外排泵的结构和功能方面所取得的进展。