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      Tetracaine-membrane interactions: effects of lipid composition and phase on drug partitioning, location, and ionization.

      Biophysical Journal
      1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, Adsorption, Cholesterol, Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, Fluorescence, Ions, metabolism, Membranes, Artificial, Tetracaine, pharmacokinetics

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          Abstract

          Interactions of the local anesthetic tetracaine with unilamellar vesicles made of dimyristoyl or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC or DPPC), the latter without or with cholesterol, were examined by following changes in the drug's fluorescent properties. Tetracaine's location within the membrane (as indicated by the equivalent dielectric constant around the aromatic fluorophore), its membrane:buffer partition coefficients for protonated and base forms, and its apparent pK(a) when adsorbed to the membrane were determined by measuring, respectively, the saturating blue shifts of fluorescence emission at high lipid:tetracaine, the corresponding increases in fluorescence intensity at this lower wavelength with increasing lipid, and the dependence of fluorescence intensity of membrane-bound tetracaine (TTC) on solution pH. Results show that partition coefficients were greater for liquid-crystalline than solid-gel phase membranes, whether the phase was set by temperature or lipid composition, and were decreased by cholesterol; neutral TTC partitioned into membranes more strongly than the protonated species (TTCH(+)). Tetracaine's location in the membrane placed the drug's tertiary amine near the phosphate of the headgroup, its ester bond in the region of the lipids' ester bonds, and associated dipole field and the aromatic moiety near fatty acyl carbons 2-5; importantly, this location was unaffected by cholesterol and was the same for neutral and protonated tetracaine, showing that the dipole-dipole and hydrophobic interactions are the critical determinants of tetracaine's location. Tetracaine's effective pK(a) was reduced by 0.3-0.4 pH units from the solution pK(a) upon adsorption to these neutral bilayers, regardless of physical state or composition. We propose that the partitioning of tetracaine into solid-gel membranes is determined primarily by its steric accommodation between lipids, whereas in the liquid-crystalline membrane, in which the distance between lipid molecules is larger and steric hindrance is less important, hydrophobic and ionic interactions between tetracaine and lipid molecules predominate.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          17351014
          1868989
          10.1529/biophysj.106.102434

          Chemistry
          1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine,Adsorption,Cholesterol,Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine,Fluorescence,Ions,metabolism,Membranes, Artificial,Tetracaine,pharmacokinetics

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