Paclitaxel

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Paclitaxel has a specific binding site on the microtubule polymer, and this makes it different and more effective than other chemotherapeutic agents. It has the ability to polymerize tubulin in the absence of cofactors, which is unusual and unique. Paclitaxel binds to cells in a specific and saturable manner and then blocks cells in the G1/M phase of the cell cycle by stabilizing the microtubule cytoskeleton against depolymerization. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_12/1'>Paclitaxel Interacting With α and β Tubulin</scene> These cells are then unable to form normal mitotic apparatus, and eventually die. The mechanism of stabilization is not known, however, there has been strong research in support of the following mechanism.
Paclitaxel has a specific binding site on the microtubule polymer, and this makes it different and more effective than other chemotherapeutic agents. It has the ability to polymerize tubulin in the absence of cofactors, which is unusual and unique. Paclitaxel binds to cells in a specific and saturable manner and then blocks cells in the G1/M phase of the cell cycle by stabilizing the microtubule cytoskeleton against depolymerization. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_12/1'>Paclitaxel Interacting With α and β Tubulin</scene> These cells are then unable to form normal mitotic apparatus, and eventually die. The mechanism of stabilization is not known, however, there has been strong research in support of the following mechanism.
Paclitaxel binds into a pocket in the second globular domain of β- tubulin, facing the central hole in a microtubule. The corresponding space in α- tubulin is occupied by an eight-residue insertion in the loop between β- strands S9 and S10 (figure 1 and 2). Paclitaxel also makes close contact with the shorter S9-S10 loop in β-tubulin (figure 1). The molecule also appears to touch the core helix and approach the loop between S7 and H9, now known as the M loop. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_9/2'>Paclitaxel binding to M loop</scene> The taxane ring associates with the M group. It is not constrained by the dimer structure; however, it becomes strongly immobilized after the polymerization of tubulin. The amino acids that interact with the α- and β- tubulin are slightly different depending on the assembled isotypes (figure 3). The amino acids involved with the binding to β- tubulin include Asp226, His229, Val23, Arg369, Gly370, Thr276 and Arg278. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_8/1'>Binding site on β-tubulin</scene> <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_9/1'>Paclitaxel bound to β tubulin</scene>The amino acids involved with the binding of Paclitaxel to the extended protein loop in α- tubulin include Arg229, Leu23, Leu26, Arg320, Pro360, Tyr272, Lys370, Ala369, Ala278 and Leu217. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_10/2'>Binding site on α- tubulin</scene> <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_11/1'>Paclitaxel Bound To α Tubulin</scene> The ‘stickiness’ of the M loop side of the protofilament appears to be largely responsible for the polymorphic nature of the protofilaments. Whilst the microtubules remain assembled, an observed 3-6% shortening of the ~4nm average spacing of tubulin monomers, is thought to be responsible for stabilizing the microtubule polymer and protecting it from disassembly. Chromosomes are thus unable to achieve a metaphase spindle configuration. <ref name="linda" />
Paclitaxel binds into a pocket in the second globular domain of β- tubulin, facing the central hole in a microtubule. The corresponding space in α- tubulin is occupied by an eight-residue insertion in the loop between β- strands S9 and S10 (figure 1 and 2). Paclitaxel also makes close contact with the shorter S9-S10 loop in β-tubulin (figure 1). The molecule also appears to touch the core helix and approach the loop between S7 and H9, now known as the M loop. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_9/2'>Paclitaxel binding to M loop</scene> The taxane ring associates with the M group. It is not constrained by the dimer structure; however, it becomes strongly immobilized after the polymerization of tubulin. The amino acids that interact with the α- and β- tubulin are slightly different depending on the assembled isotypes (figure 3). The amino acids involved with the binding to β- tubulin include Asp226, His229, Val23, Arg369, Gly370, Thr276 and Arg278. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_8/1'>Binding site on β-tubulin</scene> <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_9/1'>Paclitaxel bound to β tubulin</scene>The amino acids involved with the binding of Paclitaxel to the extended protein loop in α- tubulin include Arg229, Leu23, Leu26, Arg320, Pro360, Tyr272, Lys370, Ala369, Ala278 and Leu217. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_10/2'>Binding site on α- tubulin</scene> <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_11/1'>Paclitaxel Bound To α Tubulin</scene> The ‘stickiness’ of the M loop side of the protofilament appears to be largely responsible for the polymorphic nature of the protofilaments. Whilst the microtubules remain assembled, an observed 3-6% shortening of the ~4nm average spacing of tubulin monomers, is thought to be responsible for stabilizing the microtubule polymer and protecting it from disassembly. Chromosomes are thus unable to achieve a metaphase spindle configuration. <ref name="linda" />
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Figure 4 shows the Paclitaxel binding site on the β- subunit.<scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_13/1'>Polarity of α- and β- Microtubules binding with Paclitaxel </scene> It is colored according to the degrees of hydrophobicity; color key on left (maximum, red; minimum, dark blue). (a) The empty binding pocket (burnt orange) is highly hydrophobic. (b) The binding center is occupied by Paclitaxel, showing excellent shape complementarity. (c) Surface recoloring illustrates that a hydrophobic depression has been converted to a hydrophilic surface on Paclitaxel binding. <ref>DOI: 10.1073/pnas.051309398</ref>
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Figure 4 shows the Paclitaxel binding site on the β- subunit. <scene name='80/809872/Sami_scene_14/1'>Polarity of α- and β- Microtubules binding with Paclitaxel </scene> It is colored according to the degrees of hydrophobicity; color key on left (maximum, red; minimum, dark blue). (a) The empty binding pocket (burnt orange) is highly hydrophobic. (b) The binding center is occupied by Paclitaxel, showing excellent shape complementarity. (c) Surface recoloring illustrates that a hydrophobic depression has been converted to a hydrophilic surface on Paclitaxel binding. <ref>DOI: 10.1073/pnas.051309398</ref>
==Regulation==
==Regulation==

Revision as of 18:07, 27 March 2019

The Interaction of Paclitaxel with Microtubules

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Samantha Jordan, Michal Harel, Alexander Berchansky

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