Ligand binding to a human serum albumin stationary phase: use of same-drug competition to discriminate pharmacologically relevant interactions
✍ Scribed by Giorgio A. Ascoli; Carlo Bertucci; Piero Salvadori
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 122 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0269-3879
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✦ Synopsis
A technique based on a human serum albumin (HSA) stationary phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) has been successfully used for the past few years to characterize the interactions between HSA and new substrates. Immobilized HSA conserves the binding properties of the protein in solution, allowing fast and reliable analyses of binding interactions. Nevertheless, clear evidence that all binding mechanisms of HSA-HPLC are pharmacologically relevant is so far lacking. In particular, non-stoichiometric interactions of injected ligands with stationary phase components such as silica and the amino acid medium (other than protein binding areas) might interfere with the correlation between chromatographic retention and HSA binding. Here we present a quantitative method to distinguish between the molecular interactions of a ligand with binding areas of potential pharmacological interest and other, non-saturable binding mechanisms. Such a method, based on HPLC same-ligand displacement, is simple and reliable, as confirmed by in situ protein denaturation. Consequently, we were able to distinguish between different types of competitions detected in the co-binding of two drugs to HSA.