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Insight into the Binding Mechanism of Imipenem to Human Serum Albumin by Spectroscopic and Computational Approaches

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-06-02, 00:00 authored by Md Tabish Rehman, Hira Shamsi, Asad U. Khan
The mechanism of interaction between imipenem and HSA was investigated by various techniques like fluorescence, UV–vis absorbance, FRET, circular dichroism, urea denaturation, enzyme kinetics, ITC, and molecular docking. We found that imipenem binds to HSA at a high affinity site located in subdomain IIIA (Sudlow’s site I) and a low affinity site located in subdomain IIA–IIB. Electrostatic interactions played a vital role along with hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions in stabilizing the imipenem–HSA complex at subdomain IIIA, while only electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions were present at subdomain IIA–IIB. The binding and thermodynamic parameters obtained by ITC showed that the binding of imipenem to HSA was a spontaneous process (ΔGD° = −32.31 kJ mol–1 for high affinity site and ΔGD° = −23.02 kJ mol–1 for low affinity site) with binding constants in the range of 104–105 M–1. Spectroscopic investigation revealed only one binding site of imipenem on HSA (Ka ∼ 104 M–1). FRET analysis showed that the binding distance between imipenem and HSA (Trp-214) was optimal (r = 4.32 nm) for quenching to occur. Decrease in esterase-like activity of HSA in the presence of imipenem showed that Arg-410 and Tyr-411 of subdomain IIIA (Sudlow’s site II) were directly involved in the binding process. CD spectral analysis showed altered conformation of HSA upon imipenem binding. Moreover, the binding of imipenem to subdomain IIIA (Sudlow’s site II) of HSA also affected its folding pathway as clear from urea-induced denaturation studies.

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