Abstract

The rate of release from multilamellar liposomes of the fluoroscent probe carboxyfluorescein was determined as a measure of membrane permeability. Liposomes of phosphatidylcholine and different anionic phospholipids were incubated with low (1 μM) and high (3 mM) concentrations of calcium in the absence or presence of aminoglycoside antibiotics. The leakage of carboxyfluorescein into the medium was not caused by liposomal fusion as no vesicle fusion was observed in experiments with terbium and dipicolinic acid-loaded liposomes. The basal rate of carboxyfluorescein release (in the absence or presence of 1 μM calcium) from all types of liposomes ranged from 0.1 to 0.3% of trapped carboxyfluorescein per hour. The presence of 3 mM calcium caused the greatest increase in the rate of carboxyfluorescein release (about 9-fold) in liposomes containing phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP 2) whereas liposomes containing the other anionic phospholipids (phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate) showed an approximate 5-fold increase. In the presence of 1 μM calcium, the aminoglycosides neomycin and gentamicin also increased the rate of carboxyfluorescein release, with PIP 2-containing liposomes showing a 3–5-times greater response than the other liposomes, releasing up to 4.6% of trapped carboxyfluorescein per hour. This drug-induced release was dose-dependent and antagonized by calcium. In the presence of 3 mM calcium, 0.1 mM gentamicin or neomycin were ineffective while the drug at 1 mM affected carboxyfluorescein release from PIP 2-liposomes only. The aminoglycoside antibiotics, neomycin, gentamicin, tobramycin, kanamycin, amikacin, netilmicin, as well as neamine and spectinomycin (all at 0.1 mM) showed a graded effect on the rate of carboxyfluorescein release from PIP 2-containing vesicles in the presence of 0.1 mM calcium. The magnitude of the effect correlated well with the ototoxicity of the drugs previously determined directly in cochlear perfusions in the guinea pig. The study demonstrates that aminoglycoside antibiotics are capable of altering membrane permeabilities and that this effect is most pronounced if PIP 2 is present in the bilayers. The excellent correlation between this membrane action and the in-situ toxicity of the drugs further establishes the specific role of PIP 2 in the molecular mechanism of aminoglycoside-induced hearing loss. Moreover, it confirms the usefulness of such physicochemical models for the screening and prediction of aminoglycoside toxicity.

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