Abstract

Thermodynamic quantities for the interaction of the anticancer dietary pigment curcumin with human serum albumin were measured by using isothermal titration calorimetry. The equilibrium constant of the complex formation at T=293.15K was found to be (5.25±0.05)105M−1. The binding was exothermic with TΔS0=(24.82±0.01)kJ·mol−1, where ΔS0 is the standard molar entropy change and ΔHo=−(7.28±0.04)kJ·mol−1, where ΔHo is the standard molar enthalpy change. The stoichiometry of binding was established to be 1:1. The equilibrium constant decreased with increasing Na+ concentration. The equilibrium constant decreased from (5.25±0.05)·105M−1 to (2.88±0.03)·105M−1 by increasing the salt concentration from (10 to 50)mM. Both polyelectrolytic and non-polyelectrolytic forces contributed to the standard molar Gibbs free energy change. However the contribution from the latter was dominant and almost invariant at all Na+ concentrations. The negative standard molar heat capacity change along with significant enthalpy–entropy compensation suggests the involvement of multiple weak non-covalent forces in the binding process.

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