Cellular accumulation, localization, and activity of a synthetic cyclopeptamine in fungi

Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1998 Feb;42(2):389-93. doi: 10.1128/AAC.42.2.389.

Abstract

A novel synthetic cyclopeptamine, A172013, rapidly accumulated by passive diffusion into Candida albicans CCH442. Drug influx could not be totally facilitated by the membrane-bound target, beta-(1,3)-glucan synthase, since accumulation was unsaturable at drug concentrations up to 10 microg/ml (about 1.6 x 10(-7) molecules/cell), or 25x MIC. About 55 and 23% of the cell-incorporated drug was associated with the cell wall and protoplasts, respectively. Isolated microsomes contained 95% of the protoplast-associated drug, which was fully active against glucan synthesis in vitro. Drug (0.1 microg/ml) accumulation was rapid and complete after 5 min in several fungi tested, including a lipopeptide/cyclopeptamine-resistant strain of C. albicans (LP3-1). The compound penetrated to comparable levels in both yeast and hyphal forms of C. albicans, and accumulation in Aspergillus niger was 20% that in C. albicans. These data indicated that drug-cell interactions were driven by the amphiphilic nature of the compound and that the cell wall served as a major drug reservoir.

MeSH terms

  • Candida albicans / drug effects*
  • Candida albicans / metabolism
  • Cell Wall / metabolism
  • Glucans / metabolism
  • Microsomes / drug effects*
  • Microsomes / metabolism
  • Peptides, Cyclic / pharmacokinetics*
  • Protoplasts / metabolism

Substances

  • A 172013
  • Glucans
  • Peptides, Cyclic