Abstract
Cloxyquin is a potential therapeutic compound possessing various bioactivities, especially antibacterial, antifungal, cardioprotective, and pain relief activities. Herein, the interaction mechanism between cloxyquin and bovine serum albumin (BSA) has been elucidated in order to fulfill its pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic gaps essential for further development as a therapeutic drug. Multi-spectroscopic and biophysical model analysis suggested that cloxyquin interacts with BSA via a static process by ground-state complex formation. Its binding behavior emerged as a biphasic fashion with a moderate binding constant at the level of 104 M−1. Thermodynamic analysis and molecular docking simulation concurrently revealed that hydrophobic interaction is a major driving force for BSA–cloxyquin complexation. Binding of cloxyquin tends to slightly enlarge the monomeric size of BSA without a significant increase of aggregate fraction. Cloxyquin preferentially binds into the fatty acid binding site 5 (FA5) of the BSA via hydrophobic interaction amongst its quinoline scaffold and Phe550, Leu531, and Leu574 residues of BSA. The quinoline ring and hydroxyl moiety of cloxyquin also form the π–π interaction and the hydrogen bond with Phe506. Our data indicate a potential function of serum albumin as a carrier of cloxyquin in blood circulation.
Highlights
Cloxyquin has been reported to exhibit high bactericidal effect against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated from clinical isolates [1]
The antibacterial activity of cloxyquin extends to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, including the multidrug resistant strains, with the MICs in a range of 0.125–0.25 μg/mL [3]
Cloxyquin reveals its bioactivities toward eukaryotic systems
Summary
Cloxyquin has been reported to exhibit high bactericidal effect against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated from clinical isolates [1]. It exerts strong antibacterial activities toward Listeria monocytogenes (minimum inhibition concentration; MIC = 5.57 μM) and Plesiomonas shigelloides (MIC = 11.14 μM) [2]. The antibacterial activity of cloxyquin extends to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, including the multidrug resistant strains, with the MICs in a range of 0.125–0.25 μg/mL [3]. Cloxyquin reveals its bioactivities toward eukaryotic systems. Its anti-cryptosporidium [4], antifungal, and antiprotozoal activities [3,5] have been reported
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