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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Sep 1995, 3385-3390, Vol 61, No. 9
E Ermolayeva and D Sanders
Pyrithione is a general inhibitor of membrane transport in fungi and is
widely used in antidandruff shampoos as an antifungal agent. An
electrophysiological approach has been used to determine the mode of action
of pyrithione on the plasma membrane of the model ascomycete, Neurospora
crassa. At pH 5.8, pyrithione induces a dramatic dose- dependent electrical
depolarization of the membrane which is complete within 4 min, amounts to
110 mV at saturating pyrithione concentrations, and is half maximal between
0.6 and 0.8 mM pyrithione. Zinc pyrithione induces a similar response but
exerts a half-maximal effect at around 0.3 mM. The depolarization is
strongly dependent on external pH, being almost absent at pH 8.2, at which
the concentration of the uncharged form of pyrithione--which might be
expected to permeate the membrane freely--is markedly lowered. However,
quantitative considerations based on cytosolic buffer capacity, the pKa of
pyrithione, and the submillimolar concentration at which it is active
appear to preclude significant cytosolic acidification on dissociation of
the thiol proton from the uncharged form of pyrithione. Current-voltage
analysis demonstrates that the depolarization is accompanied by a decrease
in membrane electrical conductance in a manner consistent with inhibition
of the primary proton pump and inconsistent with a mode of action of
pyrithione on plasma membrane ion channels. We conclude that pyrithione
inhibits membrane transport via a direct or indirect effect on the primary
proton pump which energizes transport and that the site of action of
pyrithione is likely to be intra- rather than extracellular.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Mechanism of pyrithione-induced membrane depolarization in Neurospora crassa
Biology Department, University of York, United Kingdom.
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