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1.
Natamycin is a polyene macrolide, widely employed to treat fungal keratitis and other yeast infections as well as to protect food products against fungal molds. In contrast to other polyene macrolides, such as nystatin or amphotericin B, natamycin does not form pores in yeast membranes, and its mode of action is not well understood. Here, we have employed a variety of spectroscopic methods, computational modeling, and membrane reconstitution to study the molecular interactions of natamycin underlying its antifungal activity. We find that natamycin forms aggregates in an aqueous solution with strongly altered optical properties compared to monomeric natamycin. Interaction of natamycin with model membranes results in a concentration-dependent fluorescence increase which is more pronounced for ergosterol- compared to cholesterol-containing membranes up to 20 mol% sterol. Evidence for formation of specific ergosterol-natamycin complexes in the bilayer is provided. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy, we find that natamycin sequesters sterols, thereby interfering with their well-known ability to order acyl chains in lipid bilayers. This effect is more pronounced for membranes containing the sterol of fungi, ergosterol, compared to those containing mammalian cholesterol. Natamycin interferes with ergosterol-dependent transport of lysine by the yeast transporter Lyp1, which we propose to be due to the sequestering of ergosterol, a mechanism that also affects other plasma membrane proteins. Our results provide a mechanistic explanation for the selective antifungal activity of natamycin, which can set the stage for rational design of novel polyenes in the future.  相似文献   

2.
Amphotericin B (AmB) is a very effective anti-fungal polyene macrolide antibiotic whose usage is limited by its toxicity. Lack of a complete understanding of AmB's molecular mechanism has impeded attempts to design less toxic AmB derivatives. The antibiotic is known to interact with sterols present in the cell membrane to form ion channels that disrupt membrane function. The slightly higher affinity of AmB toward ergosterol (dominant sterol in fungal cells) than cholesterol (mammalian sterol) is regarded as the most essential factor on which antifungal chemotherapy is based. To study these differences at the molecular level, two realistic model membrane channels containing molecules of AmB, sterol (cholesterol or ergosterol), phospholipid, and water were studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Comparative analysis of the simulation data revealed that the sterol type has noticeable effect on the properties of AmB membrane channels. In addition to having a larger size, the AmB channel in the ergosterol-containing membrane has a more pronounced pattern of intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The interaction between the antibiotic and ergosterol is more specific than between the antibiotic and cholesterol. These observed differences suggest that the channel in the ergosterol-containing membrane is more stable and, due to its larger size, would have a higher ion conductance. These observations are in agreement with experiments.  相似文献   

3.
Ordered lipid domains enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol (lipid rafts) have been implicated in numerous functions in biological membranes. We recently found that lipid domain/raft formation is dependent on the sterol component having a structure that allows tight packing with lipids having saturated acyl chains (Xu, X., and London, E. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 844-849). In this study, the domain-promoting activities of various natural sterols were compared with that of cholesterol using both fluorescence quenching and detergent insolubility methods. Using model membranes, it was shown that, like cholesterol, both plant and fungal sterols promote the formation of tightly packed, ordered lipid domains by lipids with saturated acyl chains. Surprisingly ergosterol, a fungal sterol, and 7-dehydrocholesterol, a sterol present in elevated levels in Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome, were both significantly more strongly domain-promoting than cholesterol. Domain formation was also affected by the structure of the sphingolipid (or that of an equivalent "saturated" phospholipid) component. Sterols had pronounced effects on domain formation by sphingomyelin and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine but only a weak influence on the ability of cerebrosides to form domains. Strikingly it was found that a small amount of ceramide (3 mol %) significantly stabilized domain/raft formation. The molecular basis for, and the implications of, the effects of different sterols and sphingolipids (especially ceramide) on the behavior and biological function of rafts are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Sterols are essential lipid components of eukaryotic membranes. Here we summarize recent advances in understanding how sterols are transported between different membranes. Baker's yeast is a particularly attractive organism to dissect this lipid transport pathway, because cells can synthesize their own major sterol, ergosterol, in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum from where it is then transported to the plasma membrane. However, Saccharomyces cerevisiae is also a facultative anaerobic organism, which becomes sterol auxotroph in the absence of oxygen. Under these conditions, cells take up sterol from the environment and transport the lipid back into the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, where the free sterol becomes esterified and is then stored in lipid droplets. Steryl ester formation is thus a reliable readout to assess the back-transport of exogenously provided sterols from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum. Structure/function analysis has revealed that the bulk membrane function of the fungal ergosterol can be provided by structurally related sterols, including the mammalian cholesterol. Foreign sterols, however, are subject to a lipid quality control cycle in which the sterol is reversibly acetylated. Because acetylated sterols are efficiently excreted from cells, the substrate specificity of the deacetylating enzymes determines which sterols are retained. Membrane-bound acetylated sterols are excreted by the secretory pathway, more soluble acetylated sterol derivatives such as the steroid precursor pregnenolone, on the other hand, are excreted by a pathway that is independent of vesicle formation and fusion. Further analysis of this lipid quality control cycle is likely to reveal novel insight into the mechanisms that ensure sterol homeostasis in eukaryotic cells. Article from a special issue on Steroids and Microorganisms.  相似文献   

5.
To investigate the susceptibilities of fungal and mammalian cells to amphotericin B (AmB), AmB-loaded lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC)micelles as drug delivery vehicles were incubated at 37 degrees C with phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing different sterols as model systems for fungal and mammalian cells. The binding and kinetics of AmB to sterols in the membranes were judged by UV-visible spectroscopy. In the 91% monomeric form, AmB interacted rapidly with ergosterol and slowly with 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC), while it did not interact with cholesterol. In the 50% monomeric form, AmB formed complexes more rapidly with ergosterol or 7-DHC than in the monomeric form, whereas it did not still interact with cholesterol. The interaction was also characterized by resonance energy transfer between the fluorescent probe trimethylammonium diphenylhexatriene (TMA-DPH) and AmB. In the 91% monomeric form, AmB caused initial fluorescence quenching in bilayer membranes containing any sterol as well as sterol-free bilayer membranes due to the release of AmB and its incorporation within the membranes. However, a second phase of increasing fluorescence was found in the case of ergosterol alone. On the other hand, in the 47% monomeric form, AmB gave a biphasic intensity profile in membranes containing any sterol as well as sterol-free membranes. However, the extent of the second phase of increasing fluorescence intensity was markedly dependent upon sterol composition. Studies using sterol-containing vesicles provide important insights into the role of the aggregation state of AmB in its effects on cells.  相似文献   

6.
The selectivity of the antibiotic nystatin towards ergosterol compared to cholesterol is believed to be a crucial factor in its specificity for fungi. In order to define the structural features of sterols that control this effect, nystatin interaction with ergosterol-, cholesterol-, brassicasterol- and 7-dehydrocholesterol-containing palmitoyloleoylphosphocholine vesicles was studied by fluorescence spectroscopy. Variations in sterol structure were correlated with their effect on nystatin photophysical and activity properties. Substitution of cholesterol by either 7-dehydrocholesterol or brassicasterol enhance nystatin ability to dissipate a transmembrane K+ gradient, showing that the presence of additional double bonds in these sterols-carbon C7 and C22, plus an additional methyl group on C-24, respectively-as compared to cholesterol, is fundamental for nystatin-sterol interaction. However, both modifications of the cholesterol molecule, like in the fungal sterol ergosterol, are critical for the formation of very compact nystatin oligomers in the lipid bilayer that present a long mean fluorescence lifetime and induce a very fast transmembrane dissipation. These observations are relevant to the molecular mechanism underlying the high selectivity presented by nystatin towards fungal cells (with ergosterol) as compared to mammalian cells (with cholesterol).  相似文献   

7.
The selectivity of the antibiotic nystatin towards ergosterol compared to cholesterol is believed to be a crucial factor in its specificity for fungi. In order to define the structural features of sterols that control this effect, nystatin interaction with ergosterol-, cholesterol-, brassicasterol- and 7-dehydrocholesterol-containing palmitoyloleoylphosphocholine vesicles was studied by fluorescence spectroscopy. Variations in sterol structure were correlated with their effect on nystatin photophysical and activity properties. Substitution of cholesterol by either 7-dehydrocholesterol or brassicasterol enhance nystatin ability to dissipate a transmembrane K+ gradient, showing that the presence of additional double bonds in these sterols-carbon C7 and C22, plus an additional methyl group on C-24, respectively-as compared to cholesterol, is fundamental for nystatin-sterol interaction. However, both modifications of the cholesterol molecule, like in the fungal sterol ergosterol, are critical for the formation of very compact nystatin oligomers in the lipid bilayer that present a long mean fluorescence lifetime and induce a very fast transmembrane dissipation. These observations are relevant to the molecular mechanism underlying the high selectivity presented by nystatin towards fungal cells (with ergosterol) as compared to mammalian cells (with cholesterol).  相似文献   

8.
Although sterols constitute one of the most important molecular species in cells, the reasons for their structure-function relationships in lipid membranes are not well understood. The main objective of this work is to elucidate the recently suggested possibility that the ordering and condensing effects of sterols on phospholipid membranes are related to the smoothness of a sterol. We focus on cholesterol, which has two methyl groups attached to its beta-face, and compare its properties to those of demethylated cholesterol (Dchol), from which the two methyl groups have been removed. Atomic-scale molecular dynamics simulations of lipid membranes comprised of saturated lipids and sterols, either cholesterol or Dchol, provide compelling evidence that despite its smoother structure, the ordering and condensing effects of Dchol are less effective than those of cholesterol. The ordering capability of both cholesterol and Dchol is highly asymmetric with respect to their ring structure, but whereas cholesterol favors the alpha-face, Dchol favors the beta-face. The origin and implications of this difference are analyzed in detail. The picture that emerges from this study supports a view that the two methyl groups at the steroid ring system of cholesterol play an important role in cholesterol-lipid interactions by reducing sterol tilt in the bilayer and hence allowing for an optimal orientation for cholesterol.  相似文献   

9.
Sterols impart significant changes to the biophysical properties of lipid bilayers. In this regard the impact of cholesterol on membrane organization and dynamics is particularly well documented and serves for comparison with other sterols. However, the factors underlying the molecular evolution of cholesterol remain enigmatic. To this end, cholesterol attenuates membrane perturbation by the so-called antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), produced ubiquitously by eukaryotic cells to combat bacterial infections by compromising the permeability barrier function of the microbial target membranes. In the present study, we addressed the effects of cholesterol, ergosterol, and lanosterol on the membrane association of two structurally and functionally diverse AMPs viz. LL-37(F27W) and temporin L (TemL) using fluorescence spectroscopy. Interestingly, sterol concentration dependent effects on the membrane association of these peptides were observed. At X(Sterol)=0.5 cholesterol was most effective in reducing the membrane intercalation of both LL-37(F27W) and TemL, the corresponding efficiencies of the three sterols decreasing as cholesterol>lanosterol> or =ergosterol, and cholesterol>lanosterol>ergosterol. It is conceivable that part of the selection pressure for the chemical evolution of cholesterol may have derived from the ability to protect the AMP-secreting host cell from the membrane damaging action of the antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

10.
Lipid bilayer membranes composed of DOPC, DPPC, and a series of sterols demix into coexisting liquid phases below a miscibility transition temperature. We use fluorescence microscopy to directly observe phase transitions in vesicles of 1:1:1 DOPC/DPPC/sterol within giant unilamellar vesicles. We show that vesicles containing the "promoter" sterols cholesterol, ergosterol, 25-hydroxycholesterol, epicholesterol, or dihydrocholesterol demix into coexisting liquid phases as temperature is lowered through the miscibility transition. In contrast, vesicles containing the "inhibitor" sterols androstenolone, coprostanol, cholestenone, or cholestane form coexisting gel (solid) and liquid phases. Vesicles containing lanosterol, a sterol found in the cholesterol and ergosterol synthesis pathways, do not exhibit coexisting phases over a wide range of temperatures and compositions. Although more detailed phase diagrams and precise distinctions between gel and liquid phases are required to fully define the phase behavior of these sterols in vesicles, we find that our classifications of promoter and inhibitor sterols are consistent with previous designations based on fluorescence quenching and detergent resistance. We find no trend in the liquid-liquid or gel-liquid transition temperatures of membranes with promoter or inhibitor sterols and measure the surface fraction of coexisting phases. We find that the vesicle phase behavior is related to the structure of the sterols. Promoter sterols have flat, fused rings, a hydroxyl headgroup, an alkyl tail, and a small molecular area, which are all attributes of "membrane active" sterols.  相似文献   

11.
Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements are performed on pure dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) unilamellar vesicles (ULV) and those containing either 20 or 47 mol% cholesterol, ergosterol or lanosterol. From the SANS data, we were able to determine the influence of these sterols on ULV bilayer thickness and vesicle area expansion coefficients. While these parameters have been determined previously for membranes containing cholesterol, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first time such results have been presented for membranes containing the structurally related sterols, ergosterol and lanosterol. At both molar concentrations and at temperatures ranging from 10 to 45 degrees C, the addition of the different sterols leads to increases in bilayer thickness, relative to pure DMPC. We observe large differences in the influence of these sterols on the membrane thermal area expansion coefficient. All three sterols, however, produce very similar changes to membrane thickness.  相似文献   

12.
Sterols are essential membrane components of eukaryotic cells and are important for membrane organization and function. Cholesterol is the most representative sterol present in higher eukaryotes. It is often found distributed non-randomly in domains or pools in biological and model membranes. Cholesterol-rich functional microdomains (lipid rafts) are often implicated in cell signaling and membrane traffic. Interestingly, lipid rafts have also recently been isolated from organisms such as yeast and Drosophila, which have ergosterol as their major sterol component. Although detailed biophysical characterization of the effect of cholesterol on membranes is well documented, the effect of ergosterol on the organization and dynamics of membranes is not very clear. We have monitored the effect of cholesterol and ergosterol on the dynamic properties of both fluid (POPC) and gel (DPPC) phase membranes utilizing the environment-sensitive fluorescent membrane probe DPH. Our results from steady state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements show, for the first time, differential effects of ergosterol and cholesterol toward membrane organization. These novel results are relevant in the context of lipid rafts in ergosterol-containing organisms such as Drosophila which maintain a low level of sterol compared to higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

13.
Cationic amphipathic α-helical peptides preferentially disrupt anionic lipids in mixed model membranes, potentially causing a catastrophic release of the cell contents or attenuation of the membrane potential. The effective role of such peptides requires considerable discrimination between target and host cells, which is likely to occur at the level of the cell membrane. Here, we explore the roles of a variety of common membrane constituents in mediating the interaction between the antimicrobial peptide pleurocidin and model membranes. We employ intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and circular dichroism to observe the effect of increasing concentrations of sterol in the membrane on peptide binding, using 2H solid-state NMR of chain deuterated lipids simultaneously to probe the effective chain disruption of the anionic phospholipid component of the membrane. We show that the degree of ordering of the lipid acyl chains in the membrane is dependent on the nature of the zwitterionic phospholipid headgroup in mixed anionic membranes. Furthermore, the presence of cholesterol and ergosterol increases acyl chain order in the liquid crystalline model membranes, but to differing degrees. Our results show how sterols can protect even negatively charged membranes from the disruptive effects of antimicrobial peptides, thereby providing a molecular view of the differences in sensitivity of various target membranes to linear cationic antibiotic peptides where bacteria (no sterols) are most susceptible, lower eukaryotes including fungi (containing ergosterol) exhibit an intermediate degree of sensitivity, and higher organisms (containing cholesterol) are largely resistant to antimicrobial peptides.  相似文献   

14.
The properties of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC):6-ketocholestanol bilayer at 50 mol% sterol were studied using the molecular dynamics simulation technique. Our simulations were performed at constant pressure and temperature on a nanosecond time scale. Data from this simulation were compared to the results of our previous simulations on DPPC and DPPC-cholesterol bilayers. We conclude that the differences in the properties of membranes with cholesterol and ketocholestanol are due to the difference in 6-ketocholestanol and cholesterol location in the bilayer. The presence of the keto group in ketocholestanol moves the sterol towards the polar region closer to interface with water. We predict that similar mechanisms would govern the properties of membranes with other oxygenated sterols, such as for example 7-ketocholesterol. Results of our simulations are in a good agreement with the data available from the experiment.  相似文献   

15.
In this study the effects of the glycoalkaloids alpha-solanine, alpha-chaconine, alpha-tomatine and the aglycone solanidine on model membranes composed of PC in the absence and presence of sterols have been analysed via permeability measurements and different biophysical methods. The main result is that glycoalkaloids are able to interact strongly with sterol containing membranes thereby causing membrane disruption in a way which is specific for the type of glycoalkaloid and sterol. For this dual specificity both the sugar moiety of the glycoalkaloid and the side-chain of the sterol on position 24 turned out to be of major importance for the membrane disrupting activity. The order of potency of the glycoalkaloids was alpha-tomatine > alpha-chaconine > alpha-solanine. The plant sterols beta-sitosterol and fucosterol showed higher affinity for glycoalkaloids as compared to cholesterol and ergosterol. The mode of action of the glycoalkaloids is proposed to consist of three main steps: (1) Insertion of the aglycone part in the bilayer. (2) Complex formation of the glycoalkaloid with the sterols present. (3) Rearrangement of the membrane caused by the formation of a network of sterol-glycoalkaloid complexes resulting in a transient disruption of the bilayer during which leakage occurs.  相似文献   

16.
Amphotericin B (AmB) is a well-known polyene macrolide antibiotic used to treat systemic fungal infections. AmB targets more efficiently fungal than animal membranes. However, there are only minor differences in the mode of action of AmB against both types of membranes, which is a source of AmB toxicity. In this work, we analyzed interactions of two low toxic derivatives of AmB (SAmE and PAmE), synthesized in our laboratory, with lipid membranes. Molecular dynamics simulations of the lipid bilayers containing ergosterol (fungal cells) or cholesterol (animal cells) and the studied antibiotic molecules were performed to compare the structural and dynamic properties of AmB derivatives and the parent drug inside the membrane. A number of differences was found for AmB and its derivatives' behavior in cholesterol- and ergosterol-containing membranes. We found that PAmE and SAmE can penetrate deeper into the hydrophobic region of the membrane compared to AmB. Modification of the amino and carboxyl group of AmB also resulted in the conformational transition within the antibiotic's polar head. Wobbling dynamics differentiation, depending on the sterol present, was discovered for the AmB derivatives. These differences may be interpreted as molecular factors responsible for the improved selectivity observed macroscopically for the studied AmB derivatives.  相似文献   

17.
Amphotericin B (AmB) is a well-known polyene macrolide antibiotic used to treat systemic fungal infections. AmB targets more efficiently fungal than animal membranes. However, there are only minor differences in the mode of action of AmB against both types of membranes, which is a source of AmB toxicity. In this work, we analyzed interactions of two low toxic derivatives of AmB (SAmE and PAmE), synthesized in our laboratory, with lipid membranes. Molecular dynamics simulations of the lipid bilayers containing ergosterol (fungal cells) or cholesterol (animal cells) and the studied antibiotic molecules were performed to compare the structural and dynamic properties of AmB derivatives and the parent drug inside the membrane. A number of differences was found for AmB and its derivatives' behavior in cholesterol- and ergosterol-containing membranes. We found that PAmE and SAmE can penetrate deeper into the hydrophobic region of the membrane compared to AmB. Modification of the amino and carboxyl group of AmB also resulted in the conformational transition within the antibiotic's polar head. Wobbling dynamics differentiation, depending on the sterol present, was discovered for the AmB derivatives. These differences may be interpreted as molecular factors responsible for the improved selectivity observed macroscopically for the studied AmB derivatives.  相似文献   

18.
F Liu  I P Sugar    P L Chong 《Biophysical journal》1997,72(5):2243-2254
We have examined the fractional sterol concentration dependence of dehydroergosterol (DHE) fluorescence in DHE/cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), DHE/ergosterol/DMPC and DHE/cholesterol/dipalmitoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) liquid-crystalline bilayers. Fluorescence intensity and lifetime exhibit local minima (dips) whenever the total sterol mole fraction, irrespective of the DHE content, is near the critical mole fractions predicted for sterols being regularly distributed in hexagonal superlattices. This result provides evidence that all three of these naturally occurring sterols (e.g., cholesterol, ergosterol, and DHE) can be regularly distributed in the membrane and that the bulky tetracyclic ring of the sterols is the cause of regular distribution. Moreover, at the critical sterol mole fractions, the steady-state anisotropy of DHE fluorescence and the calculated rotational relaxation times exhibit distinct peaks, suggesting that membrane free volume reaches a local minimum at critical sterol mole fractions. This, combined with the well-known sterol condensing effect on lipid acyl chains, provides a new understanding of how variations in membrane sterol content change membrane free volume. In addition to the fluorescence dips/peaks corresponding to hexagonal superlattices, we have observed intermediate fluorescence dips/peaks at concentrations predicted by the centered rectangular superlattice model. However, the 22.2 mol% dip for centered rectangular superlattices in DHE/ergosterol/DMPC mixtures becomes diminished after long incubation (4 weeks), whereas on the same time frame the 22.2 mol% dip in DHE/cholesterol/DMPC mixtures remains discernible, suggesting that although all three of these sterols can be regularly distributed, subtle differences in sterol structure cause changes in lateral sterol organization in the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Five molecular dynamics computer simulations were performed on different phospholipid:sterol membrane systems in order to study the influence of sterol structure on membrane properties. Three of these simulated bilayer systems were composed of a 1:8 sterol:phospholipid ratio, each of which employed one of the sterol molecules: cholesterol, ergosterol, and lanosterol. The two other simulations were of a bilayer with a 1:1 sterol:phospholipid ratio. These simulations employed cholesterol and lanosterol, respectively, as their sterol components. The observed differences in simulations with cholesterol and lanosterol may have their implication on the form of the phospholipid/sterol phase diagram.  相似文献   

20.
AmB is an antifungal drug of polyene. Although it is prone to nephrotoxicity, it is still the gold standard in the clinical treatment of fungal infection. Sterol plays a decisive role in the drug activity of AmB. The antifungal activity of AmB depends on ergosterol in fungal membranes, and its toxicity is related to cholesterol in mammalian membranes. At the same time, AmB interacts with biofilms, leading to a significant loss of potassium ions and affecting the transport of potassium ions across membranes. Meanwhile, metal cation may also affect AmB molecules’ aggregation on the membrane. This paper mainly studied the effects of different concentrations of potassium ions on the interactions between AmB and lipid monolayers containing cholesterol or ergosterol and explored the differences in the impact of varying potassium ions on the drug activity of AmB on monolayers rich in these two kinds of sterols. The results show that potassium ions caused the collapse of lipid monolayer and lipid-AmB monolayer to disappear. The limiting molecular area of these monolayers also increased due to potassium ions. The limiting molecular area of the monolayer in the presence of ergosterol has a great difference in the different concentration of potassium ions, which is different from that in the presence of cholesterol. The presence of potassium ions, regardless of the intensity of K+ ions, increased the maximum elastic modulus of the lipid/sterol monolayer with and without AmB. The presence of potassium ions reduced the influence of AmB on the stability of the lipid monolayer containing cholesterol. The impact of AmB on the stability of the lipid monolayer containing ergosterol was related to the concentration of potassium ions. The potassium ions increased the area of the ordered “island” region on the lipid-AmB monolayer containing cholesterol, and the boundary of the microregion produced different degrees of curvature. However, on the lipid/ergosterol monolayer, 5 mM and 10 mM potassium ions made the holes caused by AmB more denser, and the diameter of holes become larger. These results can help to improve the effect of potassium ions on the transmembrane transport of substances affected by AmB. The results will provide a basis for further exploration of the effect mechanism of metal ions on the antifungal activity of polyene drugs.  相似文献   

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