A wide
variety of phytochemicals are consumed for their perceived
health benefits. Many of these phytochemicals have been found to alter
numerous cell functions, but the mechanisms underlying their biological
activity tend to be poorly understood. Phenolic phytochemicals are
particularly promiscuous modifiers of membrane protein function, suggesting
that some of their actions may be due to a common, membrane bilayer-mediated
mechanism. To test whether bilayer perturbation may underlie this
diversity of actions, we examined five bioactive phenols reported
to have medicinal value: capsaicin from chili peppers, curcumin from
turmeric, EGCG from green tea, genistein from soybeans, and resveratrol
from grapes. We find that each of these widely consumed phytochemicals
alters lipid bilayer properties and the function of diverse membrane
proteins. Molecular dynamics simulations show that these phytochemicals
modify bilayer properties by localizing to the bilayer/solution interface.
Bilayer-modifying propensity was verified using a gramicidin-based
assay, and indiscriminate modulation of membrane protein function
was demonstrated using four proteins: membrane-anchored metalloproteases,
mechanosensitive ion channels, and voltage-dependent potassium and
sodium channels. Each protein exhibited similar responses to multiple
phytochemicals, consistent with a common, bilayer-mediated mechanism.
Our results suggest that many effects of amphiphilic phytochemicals
are due to cell membrane perturbations, rather than specific protein
binding.
AcrB is the major multidrug exporter in Escherichia coli. Although several substrate-entrances have been identified, the specificity of these various transport paths remains unclear. Here we present evidence for a substrate channel (channel 3) from the central cavity of the AcrB trimer, which is connected directly to the deep pocket without first passing the switch-loop and the proximal pocket . Planar aromatic cations, such as ethidium, prefer channel 3 to channels 1 and 2. The efflux through channel 3 increases by targeted mutations and is not in competition with the export of drugs such as minocycline and erythromycin through channels 1 and 2. A switch-loop mutant, in which the pathway from the proximal to the deep pocket is hindered, can export only channel 3-utilizing drugs. The usage of multiple entrances thus contributes to the recognition and transport of a wide range of drugs with different physicochemical properties.
Multidrug efflux pumps are inner membrane transporters that export multiple antibiotics from the inside to the outside of bacterial cells, contributing to bacterial multidrug resistance (MDR). Postgenomic analysis has demonstrated that numerous multidrug efflux pumps exist in bacteria. Also, the co-crystal structural analysis of multidrug efflux pumps revealed the drug recognition and export mechanisms, and the inhibitory mechanisms of the pumps. A single multidrug efflux pump can export multiple antibiotics; hence, developing efflux pump inhibitors is crucial in overcoming infectious diseases caused by multidrug-resistant bacteria. This review article describes the role of multidrug efflux pumps in MDR, and their physiological functions and inhibitory mechanisms.
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