AI Article Synopsis

  • Amantelide A, a compound derived from marine cyanobacterium, has shown broad-spectrum effectiveness against various mammalian cells, bacterial pathogens, and marine fungi.
  • The research identified that amantelide A targets ergosterol-rich membranes, causing pore formation and cell death, a similar action found in known polyene antifungals.
  • The study also indicates that while amantelide A interacts with cholesterol-containing membranes potentially contributing to its cytotoxicity, its effects on actin dynamics suggest additional cellular impacts that may play a role in its overall mechanism of action.

Article Abstract

Amantelide A, a polyhydroxylated macrolide isolated from a marine cyanobacterium, displays broad-spectrum activity against mammalian cells, bacterial pathogens, and marine fungi. We conducted comprehensive mechanistic studies to identify the molecular targets and pathways affected by amantelide A. Our investigations relied on chemical structure similarities with compounds of known mechanisms, yeast knockout mutants, yeast chemogenomic profiling, and direct biochemical and biophysical methods. We established that amantelide A exerts its antifungal action by binding to ergosterol-containing membranes followed by pore formation and cell death, a mechanism partially shared with polyene antifungals. Binding assays demonstrated that amantelide A also binds to membranes containing epicholesterol or mammalian cholesterol, thus suggesting that the cytotoxicity to mammalian cells might be due to its affinity to cholesterol-containing membranes. However, membrane interactions were not completely dependent on sterols. Yeast chemogenomic profiling suggested additional direct or indirect effects on actin. Accordingly, we performed actin polymerization assays, which suggested that amantelide A also promotes actin polymerization in cell-free systems. However, the C-33 acetoxy derivative amantelide B showed a similar effect on actin dynamics in vitro but no significant activity against yeast. Overall, these studies suggest that the membrane effects are the most functionally relevant for amantelide A mechanism of action.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8220859PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbic.202000685DOI Listing

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