Literature DB >> 15461517

Aminoglycoside antibiotics aggregate to form starch-like fibers on negatively charged surfaces and on phage lambda-DNA.

Marta Kopaczynska1, Matthias Lauer, Andrea Schulz, Tianyu Wang, Andreas Schaefer, Jürgen-Hinrich Fuhrhop.   

Abstract

The water-soluble (> 200 mg/mL) antibiotics tobramycin, kanamycin, and neomycin spontaneously produce rigid fibers on negatively charged surfaces (mica, graphite, DNA). Atomic force microscopy showed single strands of tobramycin on mica at pH 7 with a length of several hundred nanometers and a diameter of 0.5 nm and double helices with a diameter of 1.0 nm and a helical pitch of 7 nm. At pH 13 (NaOH) up to 15 microm long, rigid fibers with a uniform height of 2.4 nm and an apparent helical pitch of 30 nm were formed along the sodium silicate channels on the surface of mica. Kanamycin and neomycin behaved similarly. Fibers of similar length and width, but without secondary structure, were obtained from aqueous solutions at pH 7 on amorphous, hydrophilized carbon and characterized by transmission electron microscopy. Overstretched phage lambda-DNA strands with a height of 1.0 nm on mica did not interact with tobramycin coils at pH 7. After treatment with EDTA, however, the height of the magnesium-free lambda-DNA strands grew from 1.0 to 3.8 nm after treatment with tobramycin, which suggests a wrapping by the supramolecular fibers. Such fibers may interact with F-actin fibers in biological cells, which would explain the known aggressiveness of aminoglycosides toward bacterial cell membranes and their ototoxicity. Copyright 2004 American Chemical Society

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15461517     DOI: 10.1021/la049207m

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  5 in total

1.  Aggregation of Kanamycin A: dimer formation with physiological cations.

Authors:  Johannes M Dieterich; Ulrich Gerstel; Jens-Michael Schröder; Bernd Hartke
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 1.810

2.  Cationic polyamines inhibit anthrax lethal factor protease.

Authors:  Mark Evan Goldman; Lynne Cregar; Dominique Nguyen; Ondrej Simo; Sean O'Malley; Tom Humphreys
Journal:  BMC Pharmacol       Date:  2006-06-08

3.  Aminoglycoside Antibiotics Inhibit Phage Infection by Blocking an Early Step of the Infection Cycle.

Authors:  Larissa Kever; Aël Hardy; Tom Luthe; Max Hünnefeld; Cornelia Gätgens; Lars Milke; Johanna Wiechert; Johannes Wittmann; Cristina Moraru; Jan Marienhagen; Julia Frunzke
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 7.786

4.  Selective condensation of DNA by aminoglycoside antibiotics.

Authors:  M Kopaczynska; A Schulz; K Fraczkowska; S Kraszewski; H Podbielska; J H Fuhrhop
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2015-12-08       Impact factor: 1.733

Review 5.  The Supramolecular Self-Assembly of Aminoglycoside Antibiotics and their Applications.

Authors:  Ratan W Jadhav; Mohammad Al Kobaisi; Lathe A Jones; Ajayan Vinu; Sheshanath V Bhosale
Journal:  ChemistryOpen       Date:  2019-08-26       Impact factor: 2.911

  5 in total

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