4.7 Article

Effects of Heme Site (FA1) Ligands Bilirubin, Biliverdin, Hemin, and Methyl Orange on the Albumin Binding of Site I Marker Warfarin: Complex Allosteric Interactions

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232214007

Keywords

human serum albumin; warfarin; Sudlow's site I; heme site; allosteric modulation

Funding

  1. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [UNKP-21-5 (UNKP-21-5-PTE-1347)]

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This study investigates the effects of different Heme site ligands on the interaction between warfarin and Human serum albumin (HSA). The results show that these ligands can significantly modulate the binding affinity of warfarin to HSA, and the outcome can even be concentration dependent. The fluorescence spectroscopic results may be misleading in these ligand-albumin interactions.
Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant plasma protein in circulation. The three most important drug-binding sites on HSA are Sudlow's Site I (subdomain IIA), Sudlow's Site II (subdomain IIIA), and Heme site (subdomain IB). Heme site and Site I are allosterically coupled; therefore, their ligands may be able to allosterically modulate the binding affinity of each other. In this study, the effects of four Heme site ligands (bilirubin, biliverdin, hemin, and methyl orange) on the interaction of the Site I ligand warfarin with HSA were tested, employing fluorescence spectroscopic, ultrafiltration, and ultracentrifugation studies. Our major results/conclusions are the following. (1) Quenching studies indicated no relevant interaction, while the other fluorescent model used suggested that each Heme site ligand strongly decreases the albumin binding of warfarin. (2) Ultrafiltration and ultracentrifugation studies demonstrated the complex modulation of warfarin-HSA interaction by the different Heme site markers; for example, bilirubin strongly decreased while methyl orange considerably increased the bound fraction of warfarin. (3) Fluorescence spectroscopic studies showed misleading results in these diligand-albumin interactions. (4) Different Heme site ligands can increase or decrease the albumin binding of warfarin and the outcome can even be concentration dependent (e.g., biliverdin and hemin).

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