| Literature DB >> 24998949 |
Maria do Perpetuo Socorro Borges Carriço Ferreira, Mariana Filomena do Carmo Cardoso, Fernando de Carvalho da Silva, Vitor Francisco Ferreira, Emerson Silva Lima, João Vicente Braga Souza1.
Abstract
This study evaluated the antifungal activities of synthetic naphthoquinones against opportunistic and dermatophytic fungi and their preliminary mechanisms of action. The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of four synthetic naphthoquinones for 89 microorganisms, including opportunistic yeast agents, dermatophytes and opportunistic filamentous fungi, were determined. The compound that exhibited the best activity was assessed for its action against the cell wall (sorbitol test), for interference associated with ergosterol interaction, for osmotic balance (K+ efflux) and for membrane leakage of substances that absorb at the wavelength of 260 nm. All tested naphthoquinones exhibited antifungal activity, and compound IVS320 (3a,10b-dihydro-1H-cyclopenta [b] naphtho [2,3-d] furan-5,10-dione)-dione) demonstrated the lowest MICs across the tested species. The MIC of IVS320 was particularly low for dermatophytes (values ranging from 5-28 μg/mL) and Cryptococcus spp. (3-5 μg/mL). In preliminary mechanism-of-action tests, IVS320 did not alter the fungal cell wall but did cause problems in terms of cell membrane permeability (efflux of K+ and leakage of substances that absorb at 260 nm). This last effect was unrelated to ergosterol interactions with the membrane.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24998949 PMCID: PMC4094904 DOI: 10.1186/1476-0711-13-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Figure 1Structures of the naphthoquinones used in this study.
Microorganisms belonging to the INPA collection and from ATCC used in bioassays
| ATCC 36232 | ||
| 56/04; 377/06; 839/10; 113/01; 07/10; 143/05; 62/08; 100/04; 322/05; E2/09 | ||
| U.1068; U.968/07; U.784/78; U.1047/08; 248/95; U1059/08; U864/07; U840; U1018/08 | ||
| 12/98; WM 148/10; WM626/10; WM628/10; WM629/10 | ||
| WM 161/10; WM178/10; WM179/10; WM 779/10 | ||
| 93; Tcapt 178; D42; 794; 233; PV 78; Tcapt 209; 274; 88; Tcapt 215/03 | ||
| U80/99; U548; U656; U1185; U819; U1077; U855; Tp13; Tp269; Tcorp18 | ||
| T. capt 300/08; U763/06; U763/06; U654/06; T corp 327/03; U1113/09; T corp 07; U68; U104; Tp 10 Tp42 | ||
| PV 66/99; U1197/08; 680/07; 91/94; Tcorp 401/07; Tcorp 8/10; PV 56/99; Tcorp 494/08; T corp 282/02; Tcorp 467/08 | ||
| U72; U841; U896; U918; U1124; Tp465; PV17; P640; PV672; P218 | ||
| U1048/08; U37/10; U57/10; U998/08; U1028/08; U500/04; U1012/08; U557/04; U1128/09; U1118 |
Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of new naphthoquinones against different fungal species
| 66 | 6.3 – 100 | 86 | 6.3 – 100 | 35 | 3.1-50 | 78 | 6,3-100 | 1 | 0,125-2 | ||
| 50 | - | 75 | 25-100 | 25 | 13-50 | 86 | 25-100 | 0,06 | - | ||
| 15 | 12.5-50 | 100 | 100 | 5 | 1,56-6,25 | 56 | 25-50 | - | - | ||
| 25 | 12.5-50 | 100 | 100 | 3 | 1,56-6.25 | 44 | 25-50 | - | - | ||
| 16 | 6.3-25 | 19 | 6.3-100 | 5 | 3,3-12,5 | 10 | 6,3-25 | 29 | 2-64 | ||
| 43 | 25-50 | 30 | 12,5-100 | 8 | 3,1-12,5 | 24 | 3,1-100 | 5 | 1-16 | ||
| 78 | 50-100 | 67 | 25-100 | 28 | 12,5-50 | 122 | 50-200 | 5 | 2-8 | ||
| 35 | 12,5-50 | 34 | 6.3-200 | 8 | 3,11-25 | 38 | 25-50 | 1 | 0,5-4 | ||
| 117 | 50-200 | 67 | 25-100 | 36 | 25-50 | 103 | 50-200 | 6 | 1-16 | ||
| 90 | 50-100 | 75 | 50-100 | 33 | 6,3-50 | 85 | 50-100 | 32 | 4-64 | ||
GM = geometric mean; − test not performed, n = number of different isolates.
The geometric mean and range for each compound against each group of fungal species are reported.
Figure 2Effects of exogenous ergosterol (200–800 μg/mL) on the MIC of IVS320 and amphotericin B against ATCC 36232. On the y-axis: 1 = 1× MIC, 2 = 2× MIC, 3 = 3× MIC, 4 = 4× MIC.
Figure 3Effect of IVS320 on K efflux from ATCC 36232.
Figure 4Leakage of substances absorbing at 260 nm from ATCC 36232 incubated (1–6 hours) with 1× and 4× MICs for IVS320.