| Literature DB >> 28419132 |
Tanveer A Wani1, Ahmed H Bakheit1,2, Seema Zargar3, Mohammed A Hamidaddin1, Ibrahim A Darwish1.
Abstract
Linifanib (LNF) possess antitumor activity and acts by inhibiting receptor tyrosine kinase VEGF and PDGF. The interaction of BSA with the drug can provide valuable information regarding the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics behavior of drug. In our study the spectrophotometric methods and molecular docking studies were executed to understand the interaction behavior of BSA and LNF. BSA has an intrinsic fluorescence and that fluorescence was quenched by LNF. This quenching process was studied at three different temperatures of 288, 300and 308 K. The interaction between LNF and BSA was due to static quenching because the Ksv (Stern-Volmer constant) at 288 K was higher than at 300 and 308 K. Kq (quenching rate constant) behaved in a similar fashion as the Ksv. Several other parameters like binding constants, number of binding sites and binding energy in addition to molecular docking studies were also used to evaluate the interaction process. A decrease in the binding constants was observed with increasing temperatures and the binding site number approximated unity. The decreasing binding constant indicates LNF-BSA complex stability. The site mark competition experiment confirmed the binding site for LNF was located on site II of BSA. UV-visible studies along with synchronous fluorescence confirm a small change in the conformation of BSA upon interaction with LNF. The thermodynamic analysis provided the values for free energy ΔG0, ΔH0 and ΔS0. The ΔG0 at the 288, 300 and 308 K ranged in between -21.5 to -23.3 kJ mol-1, whereas the calculated values of ΔH (-55.91 kJ mol-1) and ΔS0 (-111.74 J mol-1·K-1). The experimental and molecular docking results suggest that the interaction between LNF and BSA was spontaneous and they exhibited hydrogen bonding and van der Waals force between them.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28419132 PMCID: PMC5395234 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1[A] The fluorescence quenching spectra of BSA in presence of different concentration of LNF; [B] UV–vis spectra of BSA, LNF and BSA–LNF complex.
The quenching constant (KSV) and bimolecular quenching rate constant (Kq) for LNF_BSA complex.
| T(K) | R | Ksv × 10−4 (L mol-1) | Kq× 10−12 (L mol-1s-1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 288 | 0.9958 | 3.40 | 3.40 |
| 300 | 0.9918 | 2.85 | 2.85 |
| 308 | 0.9928 | 2.40 | 2.40 |
Fig 2[A] Stern–Volmer plots of F0/F vs concentration of LNF; [B] log [(F0‒F)/F] vs log [Q] plot at different temperatures for determination of binding constant; [C] Vant Hoff plot for the BSA with LNF interaction; [D] [(F0‒F)/F] vs log [Q] plot in the presence of warfarin and diazepam.
Binding parameters and thermodynamic parameters of binding process between LNF and BSA.
| T(K) | R | Kb | n | ΔG | ΔH | ΔS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 288 | 0.9965 | 2.0 x 104 | 0.9538 | -23.73 | -55.91 | -111.74 |
| 300 | 0.9929 | 8.2 x 103 | 0.8912 | -22.39 | ||
| 308 | 0.9933 | 4.3 x 103 | 0.8501 | -21.49 |
Fig 3Fluorescence emission spectrum of BSA and UV-visible absorption spectra overlap.
Fig 4Molecular docking analysis results: [A] Best docking configuration for LNF sub-domain IIIA; [B] Amino acid residues surrounding bound LNF.