Glutathione transferase P1-1 as an arsenic drug-sequestering enzyme

Protein Sci. 2017 Feb;26(2):317-326. doi: 10.1002/pro.3084. Epub 2016 Dec 14.

Abstract

Arsenic-based compounds are paradoxically both poisons and drugs. Glutathione transferase (GSTP1-1) is a major factor in resistance to such drugs. Here we describe using crystallography, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, mutagenesis, mass spectrometry, and kinetic studies how GSTP1-1 recognizes the drug phenylarsine oxide (PAO). In conditions of cellular stress where glutathione (GSH) levels are low, PAO crosslinks C47 to C101 of the opposing monomer, a distance of 19.9 Å, and causes a dramatic widening of the dimer interface by approximately 10 Å. The GSH conjugate of PAO, which forms rapidly in cancerous cells, is a potent inhibitor (Ki = 90 nM) and binds as a di-GSH complex in the active site forming part of a continuous network of interactions from one active site to the other. In summary, GSTP1-1 can detoxify arsenic-based drugs by sequestration at the active site and at the dimer interface, in situations where there is a plentiful supply of GSH, and at the reactive cysteines in conditions of low GSH.

Keywords: X-ray crystallography; arsenic; glutathione transferases; inhibitors; resistance.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Arsenic / chemistry*
  • Arsenicals / chemistry*
  • Cross-Linking Reagents / chemistry*
  • Glutathione S-Transferase pi / chemistry*
  • Humans
  • Protein Multimerization
  • Protein Structure, Quaternary

Substances

  • Arsenicals
  • Cross-Linking Reagents
  • oxophenylarsine
  • GSTP1 protein, human
  • Glutathione S-Transferase pi
  • Arsenic

Associated data

  • PDB/5GSS
  • PDB/5DCG
  • PDB/5DAL
  • PDB/5DAK
  • PDB/5DDL