Direct Optofluidic Measurement of the Lipid Permeability of Fluoroquinolones

Quantifying drug permeability across lipid membranes is crucial for drug development. In addition, reduced membrane permeability is a leading cause of antibiotic resistance in bacteria, and hence there is a need for new technologies that can quantify antibiotic transport across biological membranes....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScientific reports Vol. 6; no. 1; p. 32824
Main Authors Cama, Jehangir, Schaich, Michael, Al Nahas, Kareem, Hernández-Ainsa, Silvia, Pagliara, Stefano, Keyser, Ulrich F
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Nature Publishing Group 08.09.2016
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Summary:Quantifying drug permeability across lipid membranes is crucial for drug development. In addition, reduced membrane permeability is a leading cause of antibiotic resistance in bacteria, and hence there is a need for new technologies that can quantify antibiotic transport across biological membranes. We recently developed an optofluidic assay that directly determines the permeability coefficient of autofluorescent drug molecules across lipid membranes. Using ultraviolet fluorescence microscopy, we directly track drug accumulation in giant lipid vesicles as they traverse a microfluidic device while exposed to the drug. Importantly, our measurement does not require the knowledge of the octanol partition coefficient of the drug - we directly determine the permeability coefficient for the specific drug-lipid system. In this work, we report measurements on a range of fluoroquinolone antibiotics and find that their pH dependent lipid permeability can span over two orders of magnitude. We describe various technical improvements for our assay, and provide a new graphical user interface for data analysis to make the technology easier to use for the wider community.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/srep32824