@phdthesis{Shatskaya2006, author = {Shatskaya, Natalia}, title = {Identification of amino acids within the substrate binding region of organic cation transporters (OCTZs) that are involved in binding of corticosterone}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-20430}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The polyspecific organic cation transporters (OCT) are involved in the elimination and distribution of drugs, environmental toxins, and endogenous organic cations including monoamine neurotransmitters. Steroid hormones inhibit organic cation transport by the three OCT subtypes with different affinities showing distinct species difference; for example, the IC50 values for corticosterone inhibition of cation uptake by transporters rOCT1 and rOCT2 are ~150\&\#956;M and ~4 \&\#956;M, respectively. By introducing domains and amino acids from rOCT2 into rOCT1, we identified three amino acids in the presumed 10th TMD of rOCT2 which are responsible for the higher affinity of corticosterone in comparison to rOCT1. This is the first study which revealed the components of the binding site for corticosterone in OCTs. The evidence is presented that these amino acids (alanine 443, leucine 447, and glutamine 448 in rOCT1 and isoleucine 443, tyrosine 447, and glutamate 448 in rOCT2) are probably located within the substrate binding region of OCTs since the affinity of transported cations was increased together with the affinity of corticosterone. In the double mutant rOCT1(L447Y/Q448E) the IC50 value for the inhibition of [3H]MPP (0.1 \&\#956;M) uptake by corticosterone (24 ± 4 \&\#956;M) was significantly higher compared to the IC50 value for inhibition of [14C]TEA (10 \&\#956;M) uptake (5.3 ± 1.7 \&\#956;M), indicating an allosteric interaction between transported substrate and corticosterone. The data suggest that more than one compound can bind simultaneously to the substrate binding region. These results confirm previous suggestion that binding of substrates and inhibitors to OCTs involves interaction with a comparatively large surface that may include multiple binding domains rather than with a structurally restricted single binding site.}, subject = {Kation}, language = {en} }