Publication | Open Access
Unusual lipid structures selectively reduce the toxicity of amphotericin B.
223
Citations
13
References
1988
Year
Chemical BiologyProteinlipid InteractionAntifungal AgentBioorganic ChemistryBiochemistryFungal Cell BiologyNatural SciencesMechanism Of ActionAmphotericin BLipid-stabilized Amphotericin AggregatesLipid ScienceRibbon-like StructuresCellular BiochemistryLipid ChemistryPharmacologyUnusual Lipid Structures
Ribbon-like structures result when amphotericin B interacts with lipid in an aqueous environment. At high ratios of amphotericin to lipid these structures, which are lipid-stabilized amphotericin aggregates, become prevalent resulting in a dramatic attenuation of amphotericin-mediated mammalian cell, but not fungal cell, toxicity. Studies utilizing freeze-etch electron microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, 31P NMR, x-ray diffraction, and optical spectroscopy revealed that this toxicity attenuation is related to the macromolecular structure of the complexes in a definable fashion. It is likely that amphotericin in this specific form will have a much improved therapeutic utility.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1