Abstract

A wide variety of drugs bind to human serum albumin (HSA) at its two principal sites, namely site I and site II. A number of reports indicate that drug binding to these two binding sites are not completely independent, and that interactions between ligands of these two discrete sites can play a role. In this study, the effect of the binding of long-chain fatty acids on the interactive binding between dansyl-L-asparagine (DNSA; site I ligand) and ibuprofen (site II ligand) at pH6.5 was examined. Binding experiments showed that the binding of sodium oleate (Ole) to HSA induces conformational changes in the molecule, which, in turn, changes the individual binding of DNSA and ibuprofen, as well as the mode of interaction between these two ligands from a ‘competitive-like’ allosteric interaction in the case of the defatted HSA conformer to a ‘nearly independent’ binding in the case of non-defatted HSA conformer. Circular dichroism measurements indicated that ibuprofen and Ole are likely to modify the spatial orientation of DNSA at its binding site. Docking simulations suggest that the long-distance electric repulsion between DNSA and ibuprofen on defatted HSA contributes to a ‘competitive-like’ allosteric interaction, whereas extending the distance between ligands and/or increasing the flexibility or size of the DNSA binding site in fatted HSA evokes a change in the interaction mode to ‘nearly independent’ binding. The present findings provide further insights into the structural dynamics of HSA upon the binding of fatty acids, and its effects on drug binding and drug-drug interactions that occur on HSA.

Highlights

  • Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant plasma protein in the blood, serves as a transport protein for endogenous substances such as fatty acids, hormones, toxic metabolites, bile acids, amino acids, and metal ions [1, 2]

  • We attempted to clarify the effect of a long-chain fatty acid, Ole, on the allosteric interaction between DNSA and ibuprofen, which bind to two different sites, site I and site II of HSA at pH6.5, respectively

  • Our results indicated that an Ole-induced change in the conformation of has, modifies individual binding of DNSA and ibuprofen, and modifies the mode of interaction between the ligands such that the ‘competitive-like’ allosteric interaction on the defatted HSA conformer can be changed to the ‘nearly independent’ binding on non-defatted HSA conformer

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Summary

Introduction

Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant plasma protein in the blood, serves as a transport protein for endogenous substances such as fatty acids, hormones, toxic metabolites (e.g. bilirubin), bile acids, amino acids, and metal ions [1, 2]. Effects of long chain fatty acids on the interaction between ligands binding to albumin

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