4.5 Article

Molecular interaction studies of antituberculosis drug Isoniazid in aq. β-cyclodextrin solution: A volumetric, spectroscopic and molecular docking approach

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS
Volume 189, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jct.2023.107194

Keywords

Isoniazid; Apparent molar volume; beta-cyclodextrin; Inclusion complex; H-1 NMR; Molecular docking

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The interaction between Isoniazid and beta-cyclodextrin in solutions was investigated to understand the molecular interactions between different components. The results showed that the interaction between Isoniazid and beta-cyclodextrin affected the volume and compressibility of the solutions, and the hydration behavior of Isoniazid in the solutions was influenced by the cosolvent.
Volumetric and compressibility investigations are crucial to understanding the molecular interactions prevailing between various components of solutions. At distinct temperatures and ambient pressure (P = 0.1 MPa), the effect of beta-cyclodextrin on the antituberculosis drug Isoniazid (INH) was studied at concentrations ranging from 0.0304-0.2698 mol.kg(-1). Some thermodynamic properties of the drug Isoniazid, viz., limiting apparent molar volume and limiting compressibility (V degrees(phi) and K degrees(S,phi)) are derived from the appropriate density (rho) and ultrasonic velocity (u) data, with experimental slopes S-v and S-k describing solute-solute interactional parameters at infinite dilution. Furthermore, transfer properties of drug, such as limiting transfer volume (Delta V-tr degrees(phi)) and limiting transfer compressibility (Delta(tr) K degrees(S,phi)) of drug, reveal key information regarding the interaction of drug with a solvent or a cosolute. The hydration number (n(H)) was computed to figure out the hydration behaviour of the studied drug in both the mediums. The encapsulation of isoniazid drug in the hydrophobic region of cosolute (beta-cyclodextrin) in the solution phase was evaluated using H-1 NMR titration. Additionally, theoretical molecular docking was employed to determine the possible conformation and binding energy of the non-covalent inclusion complex.

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