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1.
In this paper, we describe a fluorescent antibacterial analog, 6, with utility as a competition probe to determine affinities of other antibacterial analogs for human serum albumin (HSA). Analog 6 bound to HSA with an affinity of 400+/-100 nM and the fluorescence was environmentally sensitive. With 370 nm excitation, environmental sensitivity was indicated by a quenching of the 530 nm emission when the probe bound to HSA. Displacement of dansylsarcosine from HSA by 6 indicated it competed with compounds that bound at site II (ibuprofen binding site) on HSA. Analog 6 also shifted the NMR peaks of an HSA bound oleic acid molecule that itself was affected by compounds that bound at site II. In addition to binding at site II, 6 interacted at site I (warfarin binding site) as indicated by displacement of dansylamide and the shifting of NMR peaks of an HSA bound oleic acid molecule affected by warfarin site binding. Additional evidence for multiple site interaction was discovered when a percentage of 6 could be displaced by either ibuprofen or phenylbutazone. A competition assay was established using 6 to determine relative affinities of other antibacterial inhibitors for HSA.  相似文献   

2.
The reversible binding of ethacrynic acid was characterized by a difference circular dichroism method. A 2/1 stoichiometry was determined for the [drug]/[HSA] (human serum albumin) complex. The reversible binding of ethacrynic acid to HSA determines direct competition with ligands that selectivity bind to site II and to the fatty acid site. Furthermore, indirect competition was shown for ligands for site I (anticooperative) and to site III (cooperative). Chirality 11:33–38, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
It is well known that various physiological factors such as pH, endogenous substances or post-translational modifications can affect the conformational state of human serum albumin (HSA). In a previous study, we reported that both pH- and long chain fatty acid-induced conformational changes can alter the interactive binding of ligands to the two principal binding sites of HSA, namely, site I and site II. In the present study, the effect of metal-catalyzed oxidation (MCO) caused by ascorbate/oxygen/trace metals on HSA structure and the interactive binding between dansyl-L-asparagine (DNSA; a site I ligand) and ibuprofen (a site II ligand) at pH 6.5 was investigated. MCO was accompanied by a time-dependent increase in carbonyl content in HSA, suggesting that the HSA was being oxidized. In addition, The MCO of HSA was accompanied by a change in net charge to a more negative charge and a decrease in thermal stability. SDS-PAGE patterns and α-helical contents of the oxidized HSAs were similar to those of native HSA, indicating that the HSA had not been extensively structurally modified by MCO. MCO also caused a selective decrease in ibuprofen binding. In spite of the changes in the HSA structure and ligand that bind to site II, no change in the interactive binding between DNSA and ibuprofen was observed. These data indicated that amino acid residues in site II are preferentially oxidized by MCO, whereas the spatial relationship between sites I and II (e.g. the distance between sites), the flexibility or space of each binding site are not altered. The present findings provide insights into the structural characteristics of oxidized HSA, and drug binding and drug-drug interactions on oxidized HSA.  相似文献   

4.
It is well known that the subdomain III A (site II) of human serum albumin (HSA) binds a variety of endogenous and exogenous substances. However, the nature of the microenvironment of the binding site remains unclear. Ketoprofen (KP), an arylpropionic acid NSAID which contains a benzophenone moiety, was used as a photoaffinity labeling agent to label the binding region. Subsequent CNBr cleavage of the photolabeled HSA revealed that the 11.6 kDa and 9.4 kDa fragments contained most of the incorporated radioactivity. Competition experiments showed that the 11.6 kDa fragment contains the common binding region for site II ligands. This fragment was redigested with Achromobacter lyticus protease I (AP-I) and the amino acid sequence of the photolabeled peptide was determined to be XCTESLVNRR, which corresponds to the sequence 476C-485K of HSA. The complete amino acid sequence of the corresponding AP-I digested HSA peptide encompasses residues 476 to 499, which form helices 5 and 6 of subdomain III A. The HSA-Myr X-ray crystallography data showed that helix 5 is involved to the least extent in ligand binding. A docking model provided further support that helix 6 represents the photolabeled region of KP.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship between the two principal ligand binding sites, sites I and II, on human serum albumin (HSA) was quantitatively and qualitatively examined by equilibrium dialysis and fluorescence spectroscopy. Among the three subsite markers to site I, only the binding of dansyl-L-asparagine (DNSA), which is a subsite Ib marker (K. Yamasaki et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1295 (1996) 147), was inhibited by the simultaneous binding of a site II ligand, such as ibuprofen and diazepam. This indicates that, in contrast to subsite Ib, subsites Ia and Ic do not strongly interact with site II. The thermodynamic characteristics for the coupling reaction between DNSA and ibuprofen and between DNSA and diazepam, which gave positive coupling free energies and negative values for both coupling enthalpy and entropy, indicated that the reaction process was entropically driven. Increase of pH from 6.5 to 8.2 caused an increase in coupling constant and entropy for the mutual antagonism between DNSA and the site II ligands on binding to HSA. The site II ligand-induced red-shift of lambda(max) and solvent accessibility of DNSA in subsite Ib were decreased when the albumin molecule was isomerized from the neutral (N) to the base (B) conformation in the physiological pH region. Based on these findings, we conclude that a 'competitive' like strong allosteric regulation exists for the binding of these two ligands to the N conformer, whereas for the B conformer this interaction can be classified as nearly 'independent'. Since the distance between Trp-214, which resides within the site I subdomain, and Tyr-411, which is involved in site II, is increased by 6 A during the N-B transition (N.G. Hagag et al., Fed. Proc. 41 (1982) 1189), we propose a mechanism for the pH-dependent antagonistic binding between subsite Ib and site II, which involves the transmission of ligand-induced allosteric effects from one site to another site, modified by changes in the spatial relationship of sites I and II caused by the N-B transition.  相似文献   

6.
A chiral stationary phase for high-performance liquid chromatography, based upon immobilized human serum albumin (HSA), was used to investigate the effect of octanoic acid on the simultaneous binding of a series of drugs to albumin. Octanoic acid was found to bind with high affinity to a primary binding site, which in turn induced an allosteric change in the region of drug binding Site II, resulting in the displacement of compounds binding there. Approximately 80% of the binding of suprofen and ketoprofen to HSA was accounted for by binding at Site II. Octanoic acid was found to also bind to a secondary site on HSA, with much lower affinity. This secondary site appeared to be the warfarin—azapropazone binding area (drug binding Site I), as both warfarin and phenylbutazone were displaced in a competitive manner by high levels of octanoic acid. The enantioselective binding to HSA exhibited by warfarin, suprofen and ketoprofen was found to be due to differential binding of the enantiomers at Site I; the primary binding site for suprofen and ketoprofen was not enantioselective.  相似文献   

7.
An NMR method was developed for determining binding sites of small molecules on human serum albumin (HSA) by competitive displacement of (13)C-labeled oleic acid. This method is based on the observation that in the crystal structure of HSA complexed with oleic acid, two principal drug-binding sites, Sudlow's sites I (warfarin) and II (ibuprofen), are also occupied by fatty acids. In two-dimensional [(1)H,(13)C]heteronuclear single quantum coherence NMR spectra, seven distinct resonances were observed for the (13)C-methyl-labeled oleic acid as a result of its binding to HSA. Resonances corresponding to the major drug-binding sites were identified through competitive displacement of molecules that bind specifically to each site. Thus, binding of molecules to these sites can be followed by their displacement of oleic acids. Furthermore, the amount of bound ligand at each site can be determined from changes in resonance intensities. For molecules containing fluorine, binding results were further validated by direct observations of the bound ligands using (19)F NMR. Identifying the binding sites for drug molecules on HSA can aid in determining the structure-activity relationship of albumin binding and assist in the design of molecules with altered albumin binding.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of Cd(II) and Zn(II) to human serum albumin (HSA) and dog serum albumin (DSA) has been studied by equilibrium dialysis and 113Cd(II)-NMR techniques at physiological pH. Scatchard analysis of the equilibrium dialysis data indicate the presence of at least two classes of binding sites for Cd(II) and Zn(II). On analysis of the high-affinity class of sites, HSA is shown to bind 2.08 +/- 0.09 (log K = 5.3 +/- 0.6) and 1.07 +/- 0.12 (log K = 6.4 +/- 0.8) moles of Cd(II) and Zn(II) per mole of protein, respectively. DSA bound 2.02 +/- 0.19 (log K = 5.1 +/- 0.8), and 1.06 +/- 0.15 (log K = 6.0 +/- 0.2) moles of Cd(II) and Zn(II) per mole of protein, respectively. Competition studies indicate the presence of one high-affinity Cd(II) site on both HSA and DSA that is not affected by Zn(II) or Cu(II), and one high-affinity Zn(II) site on both HSA and DSA that is not affected by Cd(II) or Cu(II). 113Cadmium-HSA spectra display three resonances corresponding to three different sites of complexation. In site I, Cd(II) is most probably coordinated to two or three histidyl residues, site II to one histidyl residue and three oxygen ligands (carboxylate), while for the most upfield site III, four oxygens are likely to be involved in the binding of the metal ion. The 113Cd(II)-DSA spectra display only two resonances corresponding to two different sites of complexation. The environment around Cd(II) at sites I and II on DSA is similar to sites I and II, respectively, on HSA. No additional resonances are observed in any of these experiments and in particular in the low field region where sulfur coordination occurs. Overall, our results are consistent with the proposal that the physiologically important high-affinity Zn(II) and Cd(II) binding sites of albumins are located not at the Cu(II)-specific NH2-terminal site, but at internal sites, involving mostly nitrogen and oxygen ligands and no sulphur ligand.  相似文献   

9.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are strongly bound to human serum albumin (HSA), mainly to sites I and II. The aim of this study was to characterize the binding site(s) of etodolac enantiomers under physiological conditions (580 μM HSA) using equilibrium dialysis. The protein binding of etodolac enantiomers, alone or in various ratios, was studied in order to evaluate the potential competition between them. Our results showed that (S)-etodolac was more strongly bound to HSA than (R)-etodolac. The displacement of one enantiomer by its antipode was observed only at high concentrations of the competitor, and was more pronounced for the (S)-form. Displacement studies of the enantiomers by specific probes of sites I and II of albumin, dansylamide, and dansylsarcosine, respectively, showed that (R)-etodolac was slightly displaced by both these probes whereas the free concentration of (S)-etodolac increased markedly in the presence of dansylsarcosine. Moreover, the binding of ligands to sites I and II is usually affected by alkaline pH, by chloride ions, and by fatty acids. For etodolac, the presence of 0.1 and 1 M chloride ions and increasing pH (5.5-9) decreased the binding of both enantiomers. The same result was obtained with addition of octanoic acid. Conversely, the addition of oleic, palmitic, or stearic acid to the protein solution increased the binding of (R)-etodolac, but decreased that of its antipode. All these findings suggest that (R)- and (S)-etodolac interact mainly with site II of HSA, and that the (R)-isomer is also bound to site I under physiological conditions. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of the novel disaccharide anthracycline MEN 10755 with human serum albumin (HSA) was investigated by visible absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies and by ultrafiltration. Notably, MEN 10755 binds serum albumin far stronger than doxorubicin. Albumin binding results into a drastic quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence of MEN 10755; a binding constant of 1.1 x 10(5) was determined from fluorescence data. To localize the HSA binding site of MEN 10755 competition experiments were carried out with ligands that are selective for the different drug binding sites of the protein. No relevant competition effects were seen in the case of warfarin, diazepam and hemin, known ligands of sites I, II and III, respectively. Modest effects were observed following addition of palmitic acid that targets the several fatty acid binding sites of the protein. In contrast, extensive displacement of the bound anthracycline was achieved upon addition of ethacrinic acid. On the basis of these results, it is proposed that MEN 10755 binds serum albumin tightly to a non-canonical surface binding site for which it competes specifically with ethacrinic acid.  相似文献   

11.
Krishnakumar SS  Panda D 《Biochemistry》2002,41(23):7443-7452
Prodan (6-propionyl-2-(dimethylamino)-naphthalene), a competitive inhibitor of warfarin binding to human serum albumin (HSA) at drug site I, was used to determine the inter- and intradomain distances of HSA. The fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) distances between prodan and Trp-214, prodan and 7-(diethyl amino)-4-methylcoumarin 3-maleimide (CM)-modified Cys-34, and Trp-214 and CM-Cys-34 were determined to be 25.5 +/- 0.5 A, 33.1 +/- 0.8 A, and 32.4 +/- 1 A, respectively. FRET analysis showed that low concentration of palmitic acid (5 microM) increased the interdomain distance between the Trp-214 in domain II and CM-Cys-34 in domain I by approximately 5 A without perturbing the secondary structure of HSA and the immediate environment of Trp-214. Palmitic acid (5 microM) increased the prodan fluorescence by increasing the quantum yield of bound prodan without altering the tryptophan environment. However, palmitic acid (>10 microM) decreased the prodan fluorescence and increased the tryptophan fluorescence. Our results indicate that the high affinity palmitic acid binding site is located at the interface of domains I and II. On the basis of our measurements, a schematic model representing the drug site-1, Trp-214, and Cys-34 along with the palmitic acid sites has been constructed. In addition, prodan fluorescence, FRET, and ligand binding were used to monitor guanidine hydrochloride-induced denaturation of HSA. An analysis of the equilibrium unfolding data suggests that HSA undergoes a two-state unfolding transition with no detectable intermediate. However, kinetic analysis using multiple probes and thermal denaturation studies showed that the unfolding of the prodan site in HSA preceded the unfolding of tryptophan environment. In addition, the separation of domain I and II occurred before the global unfolding of the protein. The data support the idea that HSA loses its structure incrementally during its unfolding.  相似文献   

12.
Binding of carbenicillin (CBPC) epimers to human serum albumin (HSA) was found to be stereoselective. Epimer-epimer interaction was also observed in the binding to HSA. There were at least three binding sites on HSA for CBPC epimers, one of which (stereoselective site) was more in favor of S-CBPC than R-CBPC. At the stereoselective site, the binding constant of S-CBPC was approximately 4-fold greater than that of R-CBPC. The affinities to other binding sites (non-stereoselective sites) were similar between the epimers, and the affinity of S-CBPC of the non-stereoselective sites was much smaller than that for the stereoselective site. R-CBPC and S-CBPC appeared to displace each other at all the binding sites, i.e., the binding of the epimers was competitive at the non-stereoselective sites as well as at the stereoselective site. By using site marker ligands, it was revealed that CBPC epimers may bind to Site I (warfarin binding site), but not to Site II (diazepam binding site). A binding model with an assumption of competitive interactions at all the binding sites simulated the binding characteristics of CBPC epimers fairly well. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy was employed in this work to study the interaction between the antitumoral drug emodin and human serum albumin (HSA), as well as the influence of fatty acids in this interaction. We demonstrated that the drug/protein interaction can take place through two different binding sites which are probably localized in the IIA and IIIA hydrophobic pockets of HSA and which correspond to Sudlow's I and II binding sites, respectively. The primary interaction site of this drug seems to be site II in the defatted albumin. Fatty acids seem to displace the drug from site II to site I in nondefatted HSA, due to the high affinity of fatty acids for site II. The drug interacts with the protein through its dianionic form in defatted HSA (when placed in the site II) and through its neutral form in the site I of nondefatted albumins.  相似文献   

14.
Induced circular dichroism (ICD), or induced chirality, is a phenomenon caused by the fixation of an achiral substance inside a chiral microenvironment, such as the hydrophobic cavities in proteins. Dansylglycine belongs to a class of dansylated amino acids, which are largely used as fluorescent probes for the characterization of the binding sites in albumin. Here, we investigated the ICD in dansylglycine provoked by its binding to human serum albumin (HSA). We found that the complexation of HSA with dansylglycine resulted in the appearance of an ICD band centred at 346 nm. Using this ICD signal and site-specific ligands of HSA, we confirmed that dansylglycine is a site II ligand. The intensity of the ICD signal was dependent on the temperature and revealed that the complexation between the protein and the ligand was reversible. The induced chirality of dansylglycine was susceptive to the alteration caused by the oxidation of the protein. A comparison was made between hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and hypobromous acid (HOBr), and revealed that site II in the protein is more susceptible to alteration provoked by the latter oxidant. These findings suggest the relevance of the aromatic amino acids in the site II, since HOBr is a more efficient oxidant of these residues in proteins than HOCl. The three-dimensional structure of HSA is pH-dependent, and different conformations have been characterised. We found that HSA in its basic form at pH 9.0, which causes the protein to be less rigid, lost the capacity to bind dansylglycine. At pH 3.5, HSA retained almost all of its capacity for binding to dansylglycine. Since the structure of HSA at pH 3.5 is expanded, separating the domain IIIA from the rest of the molecule, we concluded that this separation did not alter its binding capacity to dansylglycine.  相似文献   

15.
The tetrahydrochloride salt of astaxanthin di-L-lysinate (lys(2)AST) is a highly water-dispersible astaxanthin-amino acid conjugate, with an aqueous dispersibility of > or = 181.6 mg/mL. The statistical mixture of stereoisomers has been well characterized as an aqueous-phase superoxide anion scavenger, effective at micromolar (microM) concentrations. In the current study, the aqueous aggregation behavior and in vitro plasma protein binding [with fatty-acid-free human serum albumin (HSA) and alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein (AGP)] were investigated with a suite of techniques, including circular dichroism (CD) and UV-vis spectroscopy, ultrafiltration, competitive ligand displacement, and fluorescence quenching. Induced CD bands obtained in Ringer buffer solution of HSA demonstrated high affinity monomeric binding of the compound at low ligand per protein (L/P) ratios (in aqueous solution alone the carotenoid molecules formed card-pack aggregates). The binding constant ( approximately 10(6)M(-1)) and the binding stoichiometry (approximately 0.2 per albumin molecule) were calculated from CD titration data. CD displacement and ultrafiltration experiments performed with marker ligands of HSA indicated that the ligand binding occurred at a site distinct from the main drug binding sites of HSA (i.e., Sites I and II). At intermediate L/P ratios, both monomeric and aggregated ("chirally complexed") binding occurred simultaneously at distinct sites of the protein. At high L/P ratios, chiral complexation predominantly occurred on the asymmetric protein template. The tentative location of the chirally-complexed aggregation on the HSA template was identified as the large interdomain cleft of HSA, where carotenoid derivatives have been found to bind previously. Only weak binding to AGP was observed. These results suggest that parenteral use of this highly potent, water-dispersible astaxanthin-amino acid conjugate will result in plasma protein association, and plasma protein binding at sites unlikely to displace fatty acids and drugs bound at well-characterized binding sites on the albumin molecule.  相似文献   

16.
Benzodiazepine (BDZ) is generally thought to bind to site II of human serum albumin (HSA), also known as the indole-BDZ site, which is located at subdomain III A of the molecule. However, differences in the binding characteristics of BDZ drugs with HSA have been reported. The photolabeling profiles of HSA with [(3)H]flunitrazepam (FNZP) in the presence and absence of diazepam (DZP) were shown to be identical, suggesting that each drug primarily binds to different regions. The results of fluorescent probe displacement experiments showed that FNZP failed to decrease the fluorescence of dansylsarcosine to an extent similar to that of DZP. In the photoinhibition experiment, site I and site II ligands failed to inhibit the photoincorporation of [(3)H]FNZP to HSA. In order to evaluate the photolabeling specificity of FNZP, an attempt was made to photolabel alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein (AGP) which also binds BDZ with similar affinity as HSA. The effect of myristate (MYR) and DZP on the FNZP photolabeling of these two major drug binding plasma proteins was examined. Photoincorporation was inhibited when HSA was photolabeled with [(3)H]FNZP in the presence of MYR but not in the presence of DZP. Conversely, DZP inhibited the photolabeling of [(3)H]FNZP to AGP. These results suggest that FNZP interacts with HSA at regions which are not located in the preformed binding pocket of subdomain III A.  相似文献   

17.
6-Mercaptopurine (6-MP) is one of a large series of purine analogues which has been found active against human leukemias. The equilibrium dialysis, circular dichroism (CD) and molecular docking were employed to study the binding of 6-MP to human serum albumin (HSA). The binding of 6-MP to HSA in the equilibrium dialysis experiment was detected by measuring the displacement of 6-MP by specific markers for site I on HSA, warfarin (RWF), phenylbutazone (PhB) and n-butyl p-aminobenzoate (ABE). It was shown, according to CD data, that binding of 6-MP to HSA leads to alteration of HSA secondary structure. Based on the findings from displacement experiment and molecular docking simulation it was found that 6-MP was located within binding cavity of subdomain IIA and the space occupied by site markers overlapped with that of 6-MP. Displacement of 6-MP by the RWF or PhB was not up the level expected for a competitive mechanism, therefore displacement of 6-MP was rather by non-cooperative than that the direct competition. Instead, in case of the interaction between ABE and 6-MP, when the little enhancement of the binding of ABE by 6-MP was found, the interaction could be via a positively cooperative mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
A comparative biophysical study on the individual conformational adaptation embraced by two homologous serum albumins (SA) (bovine and human) towards a potential anticancer bioorganic compound 2-(6-chlorobenzo[d] thiazol-2-yl)-1H-benzo[de] isoquinoline-1,3(2H)- dione (CBIQD) is apparent from the discrimination in binding behavior and the ensuing consequences accomplished by combined in vitro optical spectroscopy, in silico molecular docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. The Sudlow site I of HSA although anion receptive, harbors neutral CBIQD in Sudlow site I (subdomain IIA, close to Trp) of HSA, while in BSA its prefers to snugly fit into Sudlow site II (subdomain IIIA, close to Tyr). Based on discernable diminution of HSA mean fluorescence lifetime as a function of biluminophore concentration, facile occurrence of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) is substantiated as the probable quenching mechanism accompanied by structural deformations in the protein ensemble. CBIQD establishes itself within HSA close to Trp214, and consequently reduces the micropolarity of the cybotactic environment that is predominantly constituted by hydrophobic amino acid residues. The stronger association of CBIQD with HSA encourages an allosteric modulation leading to slight deformation in its secondary structure whereas for BSA the association is comparatively weaker. Sudlow site I of HSA is capable to embrace a favorable conformation like malleable gold to provide room for incoming CBIQD, whereas for BSA it behaves more like rigid cast-iron which does not admit any change thus forcing CBIQD to occupy an altogether different binding location i.e. the Sudlow site II. The anticancer CBIQD is found to be stable within the HSA scaffold as vindicated by root mean square deviation (RMSD) and root mean square fluctuation (RMSF) obtained by MD simulation. A competitively inhibited esterase-like activity of HSA upon CBIQD binding to Lys199 and Arg257 residues, plausibly envisions that similar naphthalimide based prodrugs, bearing ester functionality, can be particularly activated by Sudlow site I of HSA. The consolidated spectroscopic research described herein may encourage design of naphthalimide based pro-drugs for effective in vivo biodistribution using HSA-based drug delivery systems.  相似文献   

19.
This study was designed to examine the interactions of ergosterol with bovine serum albumin (BSA) and human serum albumin (HSA) under physiological conditions with the drug concentrations in the range of 2.99-105.88?μM and the concentration of proteins was fixed at 5.0?μM. The analysis of emission spectra quenching at different temperatures revealed that the quenching mechanism of HSA/BSA by ergosterol was the static quenching. The number of binding sites n and the binding constants K were obtained at various temperatures. The distance r between ergosterol and HSA/BSA was evaluated according to F?ster non-radioactive energy transfer theory. The results of synchronous fluorescence, 3D fluorescence, FT-IR, CD and UV-Vis absorption spectra showed that the conformations of HSA/BSA altered in the presence of ergosterol. The thermodynamic parameters, free energy change (ΔG), enthalpy change (ΔH) and entropy change (ΔS) for BSA-ergosterol and HSA-ergosterol systems were calculated by the van't Hoff equation and discussed. Besides, with the aid of three site markers (for example, phenylbutazone, ibuprofen and digitoxin), we have reported that ergosterol primarily binds to the tryptophan residues of BSA/HSA within site I (subdomain II A).  相似文献   

20.
The ibuprofen primary binding site FA3-FA4 is located in domain III of human serum albumin (HSA), the secondary clefts FA2 and FA6 being sited in domains I and II. Here, the thermodynamics of ibuprofen binding to recombinant Asp1-Glu382 truncated HSA (tHSA)-heme-Fe(III) and nitrosylated tHSA-heme-Fe(II), encompassing domains I and II only, is reported. Moreover, the allosteric effect of ibuprofen on the kinetics of tHSA-heme-Fe(III)-mediated peroxynitrite isomerization and nitrosylated tHSA-heme-Fe(II) denitrosylation has been investigated. The present data indicate, for the first time, that the allosteric modulation of tHSA-heme and HSA-heme reactivity by ibuprofen depends mainly on drug binding to the FA2 and FA6 secondary sites rather than drug association with the FA3-FA4 primary cleft. Thus, tHSA is a valuable model with which to investigate the allosteric linkage between the heme cleft FA1 and the ligand-binding pockets FA2 and FA6, all located in domains I and II of (t)HSA.  相似文献   

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