Matherly Larry H, Hou Zhanjun
Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.
Vitam Horm. 2008;79:145-84. doi: 10.1016/S0083-6729(08)00405-6.
Folates are essential for life and folate deficiency contributes to a host of health problems including cardiovascular disease, fetal abnormalities, neurological disorders, and cancer. Antifolates, represented by methotrexate, continue to occupy a unique niche among the modern day pharmacopoeia for cancer along with other pathological conditions. This article focuses on the biology of the membrane transport system termed the "reduced folate carrier" or RFC with a particular emphasis on RFC structure and function. The ubiquitously expressed RFC is the major transporter for folates in mammalian cells and tissues. Loss of RFC expression or function portends potentially profound physiological or developmental consequences. For chemotherapeutic antifolates used for cancer, loss of RFC expression or synthesis of mutant RFC protein with impaired function results in antifolate resistance due to incomplete inhibition of cellular enzyme targets and low levels of substrate for polyglutamate synthesis. The functional properties for RFC were first documented nearly 40 years ago in murine leukemia cells. Since 1994, when RFC was first cloned, tremendous advances in the molecular biology of RFC and biochemical approaches for studying the structure of polytopic membrane proteins have led to an increasingly detailed picture of the molecular structure of the carrier, including its membrane topology, its N-glycosylation, identification of functionally and structurally important domains and amino acids, and helix packing associations. Although no crystal structure for RFC is yet available, biochemical and molecular studies, combined with homology modeling, based on homologous bacterial major facilitator superfamily transporters such as LacY, now permit the development of experimentally testable hypotheses designed to establish RFC structure and mechanism.
叶酸对生命至关重要,叶酸缺乏会导致一系列健康问题,包括心血管疾病、胎儿畸形、神经紊乱和癌症。以甲氨蝶呤为代表的抗叶酸药物,在现代癌症及其他病理状况的药典中仍占据独特地位。本文聚焦于被称为“还原型叶酸载体”(RFC)的膜转运系统的生物学特性,尤其着重于RFC的结构与功能。广泛表达的RFC是哺乳动物细胞和组织中叶酸的主要转运体。RFC表达或功能的丧失可能预示着潜在的深刻生理或发育后果。对于用于癌症治疗的化疗抗叶酸药物而言,RFC表达缺失或功能受损的突变RFC蛋白的合成,会因细胞酶靶点抑制不完全以及多聚谷氨酸合成底物水平低而导致抗叶酸耐药。RFC的功能特性早在近40年前就在小鼠白血病细胞中得到了记录。自1994年RFC首次被克隆以来,RFC分子生物学以及用于研究多跨膜蛋白结构的生化方法取得了巨大进展,从而对该载体的分子结构有了越来越详细的了解,包括其膜拓扑结构、N-糖基化、功能和结构重要结构域及氨基酸的鉴定,以及螺旋堆积关联。尽管目前尚无RFC的晶体结构,但基于同源细菌主要转运体超家族(如LacY)的生化和分子研究,结合同源建模,现在能够提出可通过实验验证的假设,以确定RFC的结构和机制。