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Vol. 55, Issue 1, 32-38, January 1999
Helsinki Biophysics and Biomembrane Research Group, Department of
Medical Chemistry, Institute of Biomedicine, University of Helsinki,
Helsinki, Finland
Cyclosporin A (CsA) is a highly hydrophobic drug used to prevent
graft rejection after organ transplantation. Interactions of CsA with
phosphatidylcholine as well as with binary mixtures containing
phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol were investigated by measuring the
penetration of CsA into lipid monolayers at an air/water interface, by
differential scanning calorimetry, and by imaging with fluorescence
microscopy the effects of CsA on the lateral distribution of a
fluorescent probe,
1-palmitoyl-2-(N-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol)aminocaproyl-phosphocholine, in monolayers. Film penetration studies revealed the association of CsA
with lipids to be a biphasic process. Cholesterol diminished the
intercalation of CsA into the monolayer at surface pressures of >19
mN/m. CsA broadened the main transition of
dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)/
-cholesterol (10:1, mol/mol)
multilamellar vesicles. The behavior of the transition enthalpy was
more complex; the behavior of DMPC/
-cholesterol multilamellar
vesicles in the XCsA of 0 to 0.1 showed at most ratios a
increase, but several well distinct dips were observed. The results are
interpreted in terms of regular structures in tertiary alloy. Influence
of CsA on lateral organization could be verified for lipid domains
observed by fluorescence microscopy of lipid monolayers. More
specifically, CsA altered the distribution of
1-palmitoyl-2-(N-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol)aminocaproyl-phosphocholine in a dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine film and in DPPC/
-cholesterol (88:10, mol/mol) mixtures in a manner that suggests that CsA partitions into the boundaries between fluid and gel domains. To our knowledge, this constitutes the first demonstration of a change in lipid domain
morphology to be induced by a drug molecule.
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