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Abstract
Vx-770 (Ivacaftor), a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug for clinical
application to patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), shifts the paradigm from conventional
symptomatic treatments to therapeutics directly tackling the root of the disease:
functional defects of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)
chloride channel caused by pathogenic mutations. The underlying mechanism for the
action of Vx-770 remains elusive partly because this compound not only increases the
activity of wild-type (WT) channels whose gating is primarily controlled by ATP binding/hydrolysis,
but also improves the function of G551D-CFTR, a disease-associated mutation that abolishes
CFTR's responsiveness to ATP. Here we provide a unified theory to account for this
dual effect of Vx-770. We found that Vx-770 enhances spontaneous, ATP-independent
activity of WT-CFTR to a similar magnitude as its effects on G551D channels, a result
essentially explaining Vx-770's effect on G551D-CFTR. Furthermore, Vx-770 increases
the open time of WT-CFTR in an [ATP]-dependent manner. This distinct kinetic effect
is accountable with a newly proposed CFTR gating model depicting an [ATP]-dependent
"reentry" mechanism that allows CFTR shuffling among different open states by undergoing
multiple rounds of ATP hydrolysis. We further examined the effect of Vx-770 on R352C-CFTR,
a unique mutant that allows direct observation of hydrolysis-triggered gating events.
Our data corroborate that Vx-770 increases the open time of WT-CFTR by stabilizing
a posthydrolytic open state and thereby fosters decoupling between the gating cycle
and ATP hydrolysis cycle. The current study also suggests that this unique mechanism
of drug action can be further exploited to develop strategies that enhance the function
of CFTR.
CFTR chloride channels are encoded by the gene mutated in patients with cystic fibrosis. These channels belong to the superfamily of ABC transporter ATPases. ATP-driven conformational changes, which in other ABC proteins fuel uphill substrate transport across cellular membranes, in CFTR open and close a gate to allow transmembrane flow of anions down their electrochemical gradient. New structural and biochemical information from prokaryotic ABC proteins and functional information from CFTR channels has led to a unifying mechanism explaining those ATP-driven conformational changes.
ABC (ATP-binding cassette) proteins constitute a large family of membrane proteins that actively transport a broad range of substrates. Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the protein dysfunctional in cystic fibrosis, is unique among ABC proteins in that its transmembrane domains comprise an ion channel. Opening and closing of the pore have been linked to ATP binding and hydrolysis at CFTR's two nucleotide-binding domains, NBD1 and NBD2 (see, for example, refs 1, 2). Isolated NBDs of prokaryotic ABC proteins dimerize upon binding ATP, and hydrolysis of the ATP causes dimer dissociation. Here, using single-channel recording methods on intact CFTR molecules, we directly follow opening and closing of the channel gates, and relate these occurrences to ATP-mediated events in the NBDs. We find that energetic coupling between two CFTR residues, expected to lie on opposite sides of its predicted NBD1-NBD2 dimer interface, changes in concert with channel gating status. The two monitored side chains are independent of each other in closed channels but become coupled as the channels open. The results directly link ATP-driven tight dimerization of CFTR's cytoplasmic nucleotide-binding domains to opening of the ion channel in the transmembrane domains. This establishes a molecular mechanism, involving dynamic restructuring of the NBD dimer interface, that is probably common to all members of the ABC protein superfamily.
The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) acts as a channel on the apical membrane of epithelia. Disease-causing mutations in the cystic fibrosis gene can lead to CFTR protein misfolding as in the case of the F508del mutation and/or channel dysfunction. Recently, a small molecule, VX-770 (ivacaftor), has shown efficacy in restoring lung function in patients bearing the G551D mutation, and this has been linked to repair of its channel gating defect. However, these studies did not reveal the mechanism of action of VX-770 in detail. Normally, CFTR channel activity is regulated by phosphorylation, ATP binding, and hydrolysis. Hence, it has been hypothesized that VX-770 modifies one or more of these metabolic events. In this study, we examined VX-770 activity using a reconstitution system for purified CFTR protein, a system that enables control of known regulatory factors. We studied the consequences of VX-770 interaction with CFTR incorporated in planar lipid bilayers and in proteoliposomes, using a novel flux-based assay. We found that purified and phosphorylated CFTR was potentiated in the presence of Mg-ATP, suggesting that VX-770 bound directly to the CFTR protein, rather than associated kinases or phosphatases. Interestingly, we also found that VX-770 enhanced the channel activity of purified and mutant CFTR in the nominal absence of Mg-ATP. These findings suggest that VX-770 can cause CFTR channel opening through a nonconventional ATP-independent mechanism. This work sets the stage for future studies of the structural properties that mediate CFTR gating using VX-770 as a probe.
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