麦角甾醇
两性霉素B
甾醇
微生物学
作用机理
抗菌剂
酵母
脂质双层
化学
抗真菌
生物化学
生物
膜
体外
胆固醇
作者
Thomas M. Anderson,Mary C. Clay,Alexander G. Cioffi,Katrina A. Diaz,Grant S. Hisao,Marcus D. Tuttle,Andrew J. Nieuwkoop,Gemma Comellas,Nashrah Maryum,Shu Wang,Brice E. Uno,Erin L Wildeman,Tamir Gonen,Chad M. Rienstra,Martin D. Burke
标识
DOI:10.1038/nchembio.1496
摘要
NMR structural data and biophysical and biological experiments show that the antifungal compound amphotericin is toxic because it acts as a sterol sponge by interacting with ergosterol on the fungal membrane and extracting it from within the membrane to the surface of the membrane. For over 50 years, amphotericin has remained the powerful but highly toxic last line of defense in treating life-threatening fungal infections in humans with minimal development of microbial resistance. Understanding how this small molecule kills yeast is thus critical for guiding development of derivatives with an improved therapeutic index and other resistance-refractory antimicrobial agents. In the widely accepted ion channel model for its mechanism of cytocidal action, amphotericin forms aggregates inside lipid bilayers that permeabilize and kill cells. In contrast, we report that amphotericin exists primarily in the form of large, extramembranous aggregates that kill yeast by extracting ergosterol from lipid bilayers. These findings reveal that extraction of a polyfunctional lipid underlies the resistance-refractory antimicrobial action of amphotericin and suggests a roadmap for separating its cytocidal and membrane-permeabilizing activities. This new mechanistic understanding is also guiding development of what are to our knowledge the first derivatives of amphotericin that kill yeast but not human cells.
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