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Filipin

Filipin is a mixture of chemical compounds first isolated by chemists at the Upjohn company in 1955 from the mycelium and culture filtrates of a previously unknown actinomycete, Streptomyces filipinensis.[1] It was discovered in a soil sample collected in the Philippine Islands, hence the name filipin. The isolate possessed potent antifungal activity. It was identified as a polyene macrolide based on its characteristic UV-Vis and IR spectra.

Functions

Although the polyene macrolide antibiotics exhibit potent antifungal activity, most are too toxic for therapeutic applications, with the exceptions of amphotericin B and nystatin A1. Unlike amphotericin B and nystatin A1 which form sterol-dependent ion channels, filipin is thought to be a simple membrane disrupter. Since filipin is highly fluorescent and binds specifically to cholesterol, it has found widespread use as a histochemical stain for cholesterol. This method of detecting cholesterol in cell membranes is used clinically in the study and diagnosis of Type C Niemann-Pick disease.[citation needed]

It is also used in cellular biology as an inhibitor of the raft/caveolae endocytosis pathway on mammalian cells (at concentrations around 3 μg/mL)[citation needed]

Types

Filipin is a mixture of four components - filipin I (4%), II (25%), III (53%), and IV (18%) - and should be referred to as the filipin complex.[2][3]

The relative and absolute stereochemistry of filipin III was determined by 13C NMR acetonide analysis.[4]

References

  1. ^ Whitfield, G. B.; Brock, T. D.; Ammann, A.; Gottlieb, D.; Carter, H. E. (1955). "Filipin, an Antifungal Antibiotic: Isolation and Properties". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 77 (18): 4799–4801. doi:10.1021/ja01623a032. S2CID 101457395.
  2. ^ Ceder, O.; Ryhage, R. (1964). "The Structure of Filipin". Acta Chem. Scand. 18: 558–561. doi:10.3891/acta.chem.scand.18-0558.
  3. ^ Bergy, M. E.; Eble, T. E. (1968). "Filipin Complex". Biochemistry. 7 (2): 653–659. doi:10.1021/bi00842a021. PMID 4296188.
  4. ^ Rychnovsky, S. D.; Richardson, T. I. (1995). "Relative and Absolute Configuration of Filipin III". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 34 (11): 1227–1230. doi:10.1002/anie.199512271.

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