| Amphotericin B Channels in the Bacterial Membrane: Role of Sterol and Temperature Biophysical Journal, Volume 85, Issue 4, 1 October 2003, Pages 2323-2332 Berenice Venegas, Javier González-Damián, Heliodoro Celis and Iván Ortega-Blake Abstract Amphotericin B is an antibiotic that forms ion channels in the membrane of a host cell. The change in permeability produced by these channels is greatly improved by sterols; nevertheless, the single channel conductivity remains invariant. Hence, it is proposed that sterols do not act directly, but rather through the modulation of the membrane phase. We look at the formation of these channels in the bacterial membrane to determine the mechanism of its known antibiotic resistance. We found that channels can indeed be formed in this membrane, but a substantial amount of amphotericin B is required. We also study the effects of the antibiotic concentration needed for channel expression as well as the dynamics of channels affected by both sterol and temperature in phosphatidylcholine membranes. The results support the idea that membrane structure is a determining factor in the action of the antibiotic. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (192 kb) |
| Ion Channel Behavior of Amphotericin B in Sterol-Free and Cholesterol- or Ergosterol-Containing Supported Phosphatidylcholine Bilayer Model Membranes Investigated by Electrochemistry and Spectroscopy Biophysical Journal, Volume 83, Issue 6, 1 December 2002, Pages 3245-3255 Weimin Huang, Zheling Zhang, Xiaojun Han, Jilin Tang, Jianguo Wang, Shaojun Dong and Erkang Wang Abstract Amphotericin B (AmB) is a popular drug frequently applied in the treatment of systemic fungal infections. In the presence of ruthenium (II) as the maker ion, the behavior of AmB to form ion channels in sterol-free and cholesterol- or ergosterol-containing supported phosphatidylcholine bilayer model membranes were studied by cyclic votammetry, AC impedance spectroscopy, and UV/visible absorbance spectroscopy. Different concentrations of AmB ranging from a molecularly dispersed to a highly aggregated state of the drug were investigated. In a fixed cholesterol or ergosterol content (5mol %) in glassy carbon electrode-supported model membranes, our results showed that no matter what form of AmB, monomeric or aggregated, AmB could form ion channels in supported ergosterol-containing phosphatidylcholine bilayer model membranes. However, AmB could not form ion channels in its monomeric form in sterol-free and cholesterol-containing supported model membranes. On the one hand, when AmB is present as an aggregated state, it can form ion channels in cholesterol-containing supported model membranes; on the other hand, only when AmB is present as a relatively highly aggregated state can it form ion channels in sterol-free supported phosphatidylcholine bilayer model membranes. The results showed that the state of AmB played an important role in forming ion channels in sterol-free and cholesterol-containing supported phosphatidylcholine bilayer model membranes. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (257 kb) |
| Competitive Binding of Cholesterol and Ergosterol to the Polyene Antibiotic Nystatin. A Fluorescence Study Biophysical Journal, Volume 90, Issue 10, 15 May 2006, Pages 3625-3631 Liana Silva, Ana Coutinho, Alexander Fedorov and Manuel Prieto Abstract Competition studies between cholesterol and ergosterol were carried out to gain insight into the binding interactions between nystatin and these sterols. Lipid vesicles were prepared with mixtures of palmitoyloleoylphosphocholine/ergosterol/cholesterol, and both sterol molar ratio and total content were varied. The inhibitory effect of cholesterol toward the ergosterol ability to induce the formation of long-lived fluorescent antibiotic species was used to detect nystatin-cholesterol interactions. It was found that the key factor controlling nystatin photophysical properties in the ternary lipid mixtures was their ergosterol/cholesterol molar ratio and not their overall sterol content. Moreover, permeabilization studies showed that nystatin was able to form pores in all the mixed vesicles, but the initial rate of pore formation was also dependent on the ergosterol/cholesterol molar ratio. Our data show that ergosterol is displaced by competing cholesterol, indirectly confirming cholesterol’s ability to coassemble with nystatin. The distinct spectroscopic properties emphasize the different molecular architecture adopted by nystatin-cholesterol and -ergosterol complexes, and therefore are relevant to understanding the interaction of the antibiotic with membranes. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (244 kb) |
Copyright © 1976 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 16, Issue 11, 1297-1314, 1 November 1976
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(76)85775-X
Research Article
R. Strom, W.E. Blumberg, R.E. Dale and C. Crifo
The variations of optical density and fluorescence of lucensomycin are good indices of the binding of this polyenic antibiotic to membranes. The former parameter reflects more generally the binding to any site present in the membrane, while the latter is more specific for binding to cholesterol. The chromophore of the lucensomycin-cholesterol complex has a relatively long lifetime, is almost immobile in the membrane, and is not accessible to water-soluble fluorescence-quenching agents. The stoichiometry, evaluated fluorometrically, corresponds to about two cholesterol molecules per polyene. In colloidal cholesterol suspensions, the extent of binding as a function of free polyene concentration is described by rectangular hyperbolae, the dissociation constant being, however, dependent on the sterol concentration. In erythrocyte membranes, on the other hand, and even more markedly in model systems containing appropriate solvents, the combination between lucensomycin and the sterol sites is described by sigmoid titration curves, indicative of cooperative effects, and probably due to solvation of cholesterol.