Abstract

The effects of aminoglycoside antibiotics on plasma membranes were studied using rat renal basolateral and brush-border membrane vesicles. 3′,4′-Dideoxykanamycin was bound to the basolateral membrane and brush-border membrane vesicles. They had a single class of binding sites with nearly the same constant, and the basolateral membrane vesicles had more binding sites than those of the brush-border membrane. Dideoxykanamycin B was transported into the intravesicular space of brush-border membrane vesicles, but not into that of basolateral membrane vesicles. The (Na + + K +)-ATPase activity of the plasma membrane fraction prepared from the kidney of rat administered with dideoxykanamycin B intravenously decreased significantly. Aminoglycoside antibiotics entrapped in the basolateral membrane vesicles inhibited (Na + + K +)-ATPase activity, but those added to the basolateral membrane vesicles externally failed to do so. The activity of (Na + + K +)-ATPase was non-competitively inhibited by gentamicin. It is thus concluded that aminoglycoside antibiotics are taken up into the renal proximal tubular cells across the brush-border membrane and inhibit the (Na + + K +)-ATPase activity of basolateral membrane. This inhibition may possibly disrupt the balance of cellular electrocytes, leading to a cellular dysfunction, and consequently to the development of aminoglycoside antibiotics' nephrotoxicity.

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