Four human thiopurine s-methyltransferase alleles severely affect protein structure and dynamics.
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ABSTRACT: Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) metabolizes cytotoxic thiopurine drugs used in the treatment of leukemia and inflammatory bowel disease. TPMT is a major pharmacogenomic target with 23 alleles identified to date. Several of these alleles cause rapid protein degradation and/or aggregation, making it extremely difficult to study the structural impact of the TPMT polymorphisms experimentally. We, therefore, have performed multiple molecular dynamics simulations of the four most common alleles [TPMT*2 (A80P), *3A (A154T/Y240C), *3B (A154T) and *3C (Y240C)] to investigate the molecular mechanism of TPMT inactivation at an atomic level. The A80P polymorphism in TPMT*2 disrupts helix alpha3 bordering the active site, which breaks several salt-bridge interactions and opens up a large cleft in the protein. The A154T polymorphism is located within the co-substrate binding site. The larger threonine alters the packing of substrate-binding residues (P68, L69, Y166), increasing the solvent exposure of the polymorphic site. This packing rearrangement may account for the complete lack of activity in the A154T mutant. The Y240C polymorphism is located in beta-strand 9, distant from the active site. Side-chain contacts between residue 240 and helix alpha8 are lost in TPMT*3C. Residues 154 and 240 in TPMT*3A are connected through a hydrogen-bonding network. The dual polymorphisms result in a flattened, slightly distorted protein structure and an increase in the thiopurine-binding site solvent accessibility. The two variants that undergo the most rapid degradation in vivo, TPMT*2 and *3A, are also the most deformed in the simulations.
SUBMITTER: Rutherford K
PROVIDER: S-EPMC2518407 | biostudies-literature | 2008 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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