Abstract

The mechanism of membrane disturbance by aminoglycoside antibiotics was investigated in liposomes containing the fluorescent probe, 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS). Liposomes of PC and different anionic phospholipids (1:1 to 15:1 molar ratios) were challenged with aminoglycosides in the presence of low (1 μM) and high (3 mM) concentrations of calcium. Liposomes containing PIP 2 showed the greatest drug-induced changes in ANS fluorescence in the presence of high and low concentrations of calcium and at all PC:PIP 2 molar ratios tested. Liposomes containing other anionic phospholipids (PS, PI and PIP 2) were not reactive toward aminoglycosides in the presence of 3 mM calcium or when the ratio of PC to anionic lipid was increased to 10:1. The aminoglycoside-induced changes of ANS flouorescence were not due to any changes in the emission spectrum of ANS, nor to changes in quantum yield, nor to a change in the binding affinity of ANS. It is concluded that a specific aminoglycoside-PIP 2 interaction results in phase separation of PC and PIP 2 and thus increases the number of available ANS binding sites in PC:PIP 2 liposomes.

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