Abstract

The binding of six physiologically important long chain fatty acids to defatted human plasma albumin was measured at 37 degrees in a calcium-free Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. The data were analyzed in terms of multiple stepwise equilibria. With the saturated acids, the magnitude of the equilibrium (association) constants, Ki, increased as the chain length increased: laurate smaller than myristate smaller than palmitate smaller than stearate. Oleate was bound more tightly than stearate; by contrast, linoleate was bound less tightly than stearate. The equilibrium constants, K1 through K12, ranged from 2.4 times 10-6 - 3.5 times 10-3 m-1 for laurate to 2.6 times 10-8 - 3.5 times 10-5 m-1 for oleate. Successive values of Ki decrease for each of the acids, indicating that major cooperative binding effects do not occur over the physiological range of fatty acid concentrations. In no case could the Ki be segregated into distinct classes, suggesting that any grouping of albumin binding sites is somewhat arbitrary. The results were inconclusive concerning whether premicellar association of unbound fatty acid occurs. Although corrections for premicellar association produced very little change in the Ki values for myristate, they raised the Ki for palmitate and stearate by 300 to 700 per cent. A sigmoidal relationship was obtained when the logarithm of Ki was plotted against chain length for the saturated fatty acids containing 6 to 18 carbon atoms, indicating that the binding energy is not simply a statistical process dependent only on the fatty acid chain length. This selectivity that albumin contributes to the binding process may be due to varying degrees of configurational adaptability of its binding sites as the fatty acid increases in length.

Highlights

  • Fatty acid binding to albumin was measured by the equilibrium partition method [13, 14]

  • In the case of myristate, the values of K1 through 1c4 are only 17 to 25% larger when fatty acid association is assumed to occur. These values are 315 to 3400/, larger in the case of palmitate and 510 to 675?? larger in the case of stearate when association is taken into account. The magnitude of these differences increased with successive equilibrium constants; i.e. for stearate, the increase in K1 assuming the presence of association was 510% and that in Kd was 675yo

  • The shape of the binding isotherms observed in these Scatchard plots is consistent with the downward progression in the myristate Ki values

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Summary

SUMMARY

The binding of six physiologically important long chain fatty acids to defatted human plasma albumin was measured at 37” in a calcium-free Krebs-Ringer phosphatebuffer, pH 7.4. A sigmoidal relationship was obtained when the logarithm of Ki was plotted against chain length for the saturated fatty acids cbntaining 6 to 18 carbon atoms, indicating that the binding energy is not a statistical process dependent only on the fatty acid chain length. This selectivity that albumin contributes to the binding process may be due to varying degrees of configurational adaptability of its binding sites asthe fatty acid increasesin length. We have estended this work to the physiologically important long chain fatty acids that contain from 12 to 18 carbon atoms

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