The effect of variable protein binding (taken as independent parameter) on pharmacological activity of drugs is considered in terms of the exposure or the steady state concentration of unbound drug at targeted tissue. Based on the application of the parallel tube or dispersion models it is shown tha
On the possibility of self-induction of drug protein binding
β Scribed by Leonid M. Berezhkovskiy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 139 KB
- Volume
- 99
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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β¦ Synopsis
The equilibrium unbound drug fraction (f(u)) is an important pharmacokinetic parameter, which influences drug elimination and distribution in the body. Commonly the drug plasma concentration is substantially less then that of drug binding proteins, so that f(u) can be assumed constant independent of drug concentration. A general consideration of protein binding based on the mass-action law provides that the unbound drug fraction increases with the increase of drug concentration, which is also a usual experimental observation. For several drugs, though, a seemingly unusual sharp decrease of the unbound drug fraction with the increase of total drug concentration (R(o)) in the interval 0 < R(o) less, similar 5 microM was experimentally observed. A possible explanation of this apparently strange phenomenon is presented. The explanation is based on the consideration of a two-step mechanism of drug protein binding. The first step occurs as a drug binding to the site with relatively low affinity. Consequently this binding leads to the activation of a high affinity site, which otherwise is not available for binding. The suggested binding scheme yields the curves for f(u) dependence on the total drug concentration that are in good agreement with experimental measurements. The interpretation of pharmacokinetic data for the drugs with such unusual concentration dependence of f(u) appears to be a formidable problem.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The measurement of the unbound drug fraction in plasma is routinely performed at drug concentrations much less than that of plasma proteins. Commonly, the protein has several binding sites of different affinities. The obtained value of the unbound drug fraction does not yield the affinity of each bi
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