Abstract

Human serum albumin (HSA) in the blood binds long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs), and the number of bound LCFAs varies from 1 to 7 depending on the physical condition of the body. In this study, the influence of LCFA-HSA binding on drug-HSA binding was studied using triflupromazine (TFZ), a psychotropic phenothiazine drug, in a buffer (0.1 M NaCl, pH 7.40, 37°C) by a second-derivative spectrophotometric method which can suppress the residual background signal effects of HSA observed in the absorption spectra. The examined LCFAs were caprylic acid (CPA), lauric acid (LRA), oleic acid (OLA), and linoleic acid (LNA), respectively. Using the derivative intensity change of TFZ induced by the addition of HSA containing LCFA, the binding mode of TFZ was predicted to be a partition-like nonspecific binding. The binding constant (K M−1) showed an increase according to the LCFA content in HSA for LRA, OLA, and LNA up to an LCFA/HSA molar ratio of 3–4. However, at higher ratios the K value decreased, i.e. for OLA and LNA, at an LCFA/HSA ratio of 6–7, the K value decreased to 40% of the value for HSA alone. In contrast, CPA, having the shortest chain length (8 carbons) among the studied LCFAs, induced a 20% decrease in the K value regardless of its content in HSA. Since the pharmacological activity of a drug is closely related to the unbound drug concentration in the blood, the results of the present study are pharmaco-kinetically, pharmacologically, and clinically very important.

Highlights

  • Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant protein in the blood, has a strong ability to bind a large variety of endogenous and exogenous substances

  • In the case of long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs) having unsaturated bonds, oleic acid (OLA), and linoleic acid (LNA), when HSA contained more than five molecules of these LCFAs per HSA molecule, the K value decreased to 40% of the value for HSA alone

  • By employing a second-derivative spectrophotometric method, the effect of LCFAs (CPA, lauric acid (LRA), OLA, and LNA) on the binding of TFZ to HSA was examined in a 0.1 M NaCl buffer solution

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Summary

A Spectrophotometric Study

Keisuke KITAMURA * 1, Shigehiko TAKEGAMI 1, Rumi TANAKA 1, Ahmed Ahmed OMRAN 2,3, Tatsuya KITADE 1. Published: Accepted: December 28th 2013 December 28th 2013 doi:10.3797/scipharm.1310-23. © Kitamura et al.; licensee Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft m.

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