Résumé : The structure of purified P-glycoprotein functionally reconstituted into liposomes was investigated by attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. A quantitative evaluation of the secondary structure and a kinetic of 2H/H exchange of the P-glycoprotein were performed both in the presence and in the absence of MgATP, MgATP-verapamil, and MgADP. This approach was previously shown to be a useful tool to detect tertiary structure changes resulting from the interaction between a protein and its specific ligands, as established for the Neurospora crassa H+-ATPase. 2H/H exchange measurements provided evidence that a large fraction of the P-glycoprotein is poorly accessible to the aqueous medium. Addition of MgATP induced an increased accessibility to the solvent of a population of amino acids, while addition of MgATP-verapamil resulted in a subtraction of a part of the protein from access to the aqueous solvent. No significant changes were observed upon addition of MgADP or verapamil alone. The secondary structure of P-glycoprotein was not affected by addition of ligands. The variations observed in the 2H/H exchange rate when P-glycoprotein interacted with the above ligands therefore represented tertiary structure changes. Fluorescence quenching experiments confirmed that MgATP-induced changes are to be found in the tertiary structure of the enzyme.