P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is the most well-known ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter involved in unidirectional substrate translocation across the membrane lipid bilayer, thereby causing the typical multidrug resistance (MDR) phenotype expressed in many cancers. We observed that in human CEM acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells expressing various degrees of chemoresistance and where P-gp was the sole MDR-related ABC transporter detected, the amount of esterified cholesterol increased linearly with the level of resistance to vinblastine while the amounts of total and free cholesterol increased in a nonlinear way. Membrane cholesterol controlled the ATPase activity of P-gp in a linear manner, whereas the P-gp-induced daunomycin efflux decreased nonlinearly with the depletion of membrane cholesterol. All these elements suggest that cholesterol controls both the ATPase and the drug efflux activities of P-gp. In addition, in CEM cell lines that expressed increasing levels of elevated chemoresistance, the amount of P-gp increases to a plateau value of 40% of the total membrane proteins and remained unvaried while the amount of membrane cholesterol increased with the elevation of the MDR level, strongly suggesting that cholesterol may be directly involved in the typical MDR phenotype. Finally, we showed that the decreased daunomycin efflux by P-gp due to the partial depletion of membrane cholesterol was responsible for the efficient chemosensitization of resistant CEM cells, which could be totally reversed after cholesterol repletion.
Cadmium poses a significant threat to human health due to its toxicity. In mammals and in bakers' yeast, cadmium is detoxified by ATP-binding cassette transporters after conjugation to glutathione. In fission yeast, phytochelatins constitute the cosubstrate with cadmium for the transporter SpHMT1. In plants, a detoxification mechanism similar to the one in fission yeast is supposed, but the molecular nature of the transporter is still lacking. To investigate further the relationship between SpHMT1 and its co-substrate, we overexpressed the transporter in a Schizosaccharomyces pombe strain deleted for the phytochelatin synthase gene and heterologously in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and in Escherichia coli. In all organisms, overexpression of SpHMT1 conferred a markedly enhanced tolerance to cadmium but not to Sb(III), AgNO 3 , As(III), As(V), CuSO 4 , or HgCl 2 . Abolishment of the catalytic activity by expression of SpHMT1 K623M mutant suppressed the cadmium tolerance phenotype independently of the presence of phytochelatins. Depletion of the glutathione pool inhibited the SpHMT1 activity but not that of AtHMA4, a P-type ATPase, indicating that GSH is necessary for the SpHMT1-mediated cadmium resistance. In E. coli, SpHMT1 was targeted to the periplasmic membrane and led to an increased amount of cadmium in the periplasm. These results demonstrate that SpHMT1 confers cadmium tolerance in the absence of phytochelatins but depending on the presence of GSH and ATP. Our results challenge the dogma of the two separate cadmium detoxification pathways and demonstrate that a common highly conserved mechanism has been selected during the evolution from bacteria to humans.Cadmium is a trace element, the presence of which in the environment is essentially due to human activities. It is a highly toxic non-biological heavy metal able to enter living cells via transporters usually used for the uptake of essential cations such as calcium, iron, zinc, and so forth (1). The reactivity of cadmium with thiol groups and its ability to displace essential biological metals result in oxidative stress and eventually cell death (2). To cope with cadmium toxicity, living organisms have developed different strategies.In animals, as in the bakers' yeast cytoplasmic cadmium is complexed with the thiol tripeptide glutathione, a general redox regulator (3, 4). Bis(glutathionato)-cadmium complexes (Cd-GS 2 ) 4 are then driven from the cytoplasm to lesser sensitive cellular compartments by dedicated transporters. The prototypical transporter of Cd-GS 2 is the GS-X pump, ScYCF1, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (5) and, even if still controversial, to a lesser extent HsMRP1 in humans (6). HsMRP1 probably acts as an efflux pump at the plasma membrane, delivering cadmium in the extracellular medium, whereas ScYCF1 allows sequestration of cadmium into the vacuole (5). A study of a deficient Scycf1 strain has shown that it was extremely cadmium-sensitive, pointing to a major role of ScYCF1 in cadmium tolerance and detoxification (5). Additionally, ScYCF1 wa...
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