Mechanism of Binding of Antifungal Antibiotic Amphotericin
B to Lipid Membranes: An Insight from Combined Single-Membrane Imaging,
Microspectroscopy, and Molecular Dynamics
Posted on 2018-08-06 - 00:00
Amphotericin
B is a lifesaving polyene antibiotic used in the treatment
of systemic mycoses. Unfortunately, the pharmacological applicability
of this drug is limited because of its severe toxic side effects.
At the same time, the lack of a well-defined mechanism of selectivity
hampers the efforts to rationally design safer derivatives. As the
drug primarily targets the biomembranes of both fungi and humans,
new insights into the binding of amphotericin B to lipid membranes
can be helpful in unveiling the molecular mechanisms underlying both
its pharmacological activity and toxicity. We use fluorescence-lifetime-imaging
microscopy combined with fluorescence-emission spectroscopy in the
microscale to study the interaction of amphotericin B with single
lipid bilayers, using model systems based on giant unilamellar liposomes
formed with three lipids: dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), dimirystoylphosphatidylcholine
(DMPC), and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC). The results
show that amphotericin B introduced into the water phase as a DMSO
solution binds to the membrane as dimers and small-molecular aggregates
that we identify as tetramers and trimers. Fluorescence-detected linear-dichroism
measurements revealed high orientational freedom of all the molecular-organization
forms with respect to the membrane plane, which suggests that the
drug partially binds to the membrane surface. The presence of sterols
in the lipid phase (cholesterol but particularly ergosterol at 30
mol %) promotes the penetration of drug molecules into the lipid membrane,
as concluded on the basis of the decreased orientation angle of amphotericin
B molecules with respect to the axis normal to the membrane plane.
Moreover, ergosterol facilitates the association of amphotericin B
dimers into aggregated structures that can play a role in membrane
destabilization or permeabilization. The presence of cholesterol inhibits
the formation of small aggregates in the lipid phase of liposomes,
making this system a promising candidate for a low-toxicity antibiotic-delivery
system. Our conclusions are supported with molecular simulations that
reveal the conformational properties of AmB oligomers in both aqueous
solution and lipid bilayers of different compositions.
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Grela, Ewa; Wieczór, Miłosz; Luchowski, Rafał; Zielinska, Joanna; Barzycka, Angelika; Grudzinski, Wojciech; et al. (2018). Mechanism of Binding of Antifungal Antibiotic Amphotericin
B to Lipid Membranes: An Insight from Combined Single-Membrane Imaging,
Microspectroscopy, and Molecular Dynamics. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.8b00572