Volume 7, Number 3, 225-230, DOI: 10.1007/BF01124793

Comparison of the interaction of the anti-viral chemotherapeutic agents amantadine and tromantadine with model phospholipid membranes

James J. Cheetham and Richard M. Epand

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Abstract

Amantadine and tromantadine are agents used against influenza and herpes infections, respectively. Tromantadine raises the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of synthetic phosphatidylethanolamines and is less disruptive to phospholipid packing. Tromantadine acts similar to cyclosporin A, previously demonstrated to inhibit viral-induced cell-cell fusion. We suggest the balance between the hydrophobic and hydrophilic group sizes would allow tromantadine to prevent membrane fusion more than amantadine and thus inhibit infection by viruses such as Herpes, which fuse with the plasma membrane. Study of agents which stabilize the bilayer phase of membranes may lead to efficacious inhibitors of viral infections requiring cell fusion events.

Key Words  amantadine - tromantadine - virus chemotherapy - phospholipid - phase transition - bilayerhexagonal change

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