Abstract

The interactions of calcium and the aminoglycosidic antibiotic, neomycin, with various lipids were investigated in monomolecular films. Lipids were spread over a subphase of 0.05 M N-2- hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2- ethanesulfonic acid , pH 7.0, and NaCl to give an ionic strength of 0.2. Measurements of surface pressure (π) were taken with a Wilhelmy balance. In the absence of Ca 2+, 1 μM–1 mM neomycin in the subphase decreased π (i.e. condensed films) of all acidic lipids tested. In the presence of 1 mM Ca 2+, neomycin did not change π of films of phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidic acid while it lowered π of cardiolipin and cerebroside sulfate films. A unique pattern of interaction was observed with polyphosphoinositide monolayers. In the absence of Ca 2+, 1 μM neomycin decreased π followed by an increase of π at higher neomycin concentrations. Ca 2+ (1 mM) condensed the film significantly more than did neomycin. However, as little as 1 μM neomycin induced expansion of the calcium/lipid film which at 1 mM neomycin reached the same π as in the absence of Ca 2+. Such expansion was observed at all pressures of the film including the collapse pressure indicating a strong ‘complex’ between the drug and polyphosphoinositide not antagonized by Ca 2+. In the absence of possible hydrophobic interactions, both the condensation and the expansion of the film should be mediated by ionic forces. Combined in vivo and in vitro evidence is discussed to suggest the polyphosphoinositides as the physiological receptors for aminoglycosides in the mammalian cell membrane.

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