Title of article :
Cooperativity of phospholipid reorganization upon interaction of dipyridamole with surface monolayers on water Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
W. Caetano، نويسنده , , M. Ferreira، نويسنده , , Benjamin M. Tabak، نويسنده , , M.I. Mosquera Sanchez، نويسنده , , O.N. Oliveira Jr.، نويسنده , , P. Krüger، نويسنده , , M. Schalke، نويسنده , , M. L?sche، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Results from various surface sensitive characterization techniques suggest a model for the interaction of the piperidinopyrimidine dipyridamole (DIP) — known as a vasodilator and inhibitor of P-glycoprotein associated multidrug resistance of tumor cells — with phospholipid monolayers in which the drug is peripherally associated with the membrane, binding (up to) five phospholipids at a time. These multiple interactions are responsible for a very strong association of the drug with the lipid monolayer even at exceedingly low concentrations (∼0.2 mol%). Electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bonding are likely involved in the binding of DIP to DPPC. Cooperative effects among the lipids are invoked to explain the macroscopically measurable changes of lipid monolayer properties even when only one out of 100 DPPC molecules is directly associated with a DIP molecule. A reversal of the observed changes upon drug association with the membrane as the DIP concentration surpasses a threshold concentration (ccrit ∼0.5 mol%) may be explained by cooperativity in a different context, the self-aggregation of drug molecules. With its implications for the interaction of DIP with phospholipid films, this work provides a first approach to the explanation of the high sensitivity of cell membranes to piperidinopyrimidine drugs on a molecular level.
Keywords :
Drug–membrane interaction , Lipid headgroup conformation , FTIR , Fluorescence microscopy , Surface potential , Phospholipid monolayer
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry