Аннотации:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V. There is a demand in rapid and robust methods to determine the affinity of drugs to receptors, enzymes, and transport proteins. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) is a common method to prove the existence of ligand–protein binding from the shift of denaturation peak, but it is rarely used to obtain the binding constant values. The work is aimed to prove that the DSC experiments can be a source of reliable values of the binding constants and information on the stoichiometry of drug-albumin binding. DSC thermograms of bovine serum albumin denaturation in the presence of several drugs with different affinity and stoichiometry of binding to albumin: naproxen, warfarin, ibuprofen, and isoniazid were recorded. The dependences of the denaturation peak maximum temperature and area on the molar drug/protein ratio, which varied from 0 to 100, were considered. With the help of numerical modeling of the DSC curves, these dependences were predicted using the binding parameters determined in independent experiments and a simple two-state model of denaturation. The DSC data at relatively small concentrations of ligands are in good agreement with the calculation results. The deviations from the model predictions at high ligand concentrations in the cases of naproxen and ibuprofen indicate that albumin is able to bind several additional molecules of these drugs with its low-affinity sites. The fit was improved by using a sequential binding model with two binding constants K1 = 1.0 × 107 and K2 = 1.0 × 104 for naproxen and a cooperative binding model for ibuprofen. The stoichiometry of drug-albumin complexes fully saturated with drug ligand was calculated from the dependence of the denaturation temperature on the drug concentration. In the case of isoniazid, DSC thermograms indicated very weak binding to albumin.