| Literature DB >> 36071810 |
Mateusz P Czub1,2, Alan J Stewart3, Ivan G Shabalin1,2, Wladek Minor1,2.
Abstract
Serum albumin is a circulatory transport protein that has a highly conserved sequence and structure across mammalian organisms. Its ligand-binding properties are of importance as albumin regulates the pharmacokinetics of many drugs. Due to the high degree of structural conservation between mammalian albumins, nonhuman albumins such as bovine serum albumin or animal models are often used to understand human albumin-drug interactions. Ketoprofen is a popular nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that is transported by albumin. Here, it is revealed that ketoprofen exhibits different binding-site preferences when interacting with human serum albumin compared with other mammalian albumins, despite the conservation of binding sites across species. The reasons for the observed differences were explored, including identifying ketoprofen binding determinants at specific sites and the influence of fatty acids and other ligands on drug binding. The presented results reveal that the drug-binding properties of albumins cannot easily be predicted based only on a complex of albumin from another organism and the conservation of drug sites between species. This work shows that understanding organism-dependent differences is essential for assessing the suitability of particular albumins for structural or biochemical studies. © Mateusz P. Czub et al. 2022.Entities:
Keywords: NSAIDs; anti-inflammatory drugs; drug interactions; drug transport; human serum albumin; ketoprofen; organism-dependent studies
Year: 2022 PMID: 36071810 PMCID: PMC9438504 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252522006820
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 5.588
Figure 1Chemical structure of ketoprofen; the chiral center is labeled with an asterisk.
Data-collection, structure-refinement and structure-quality statistics
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell. Ramachandran plot statistics are calculated by MolProbity (Williams et al., 2018 ▸). DS2, DS3 and DS9 refer to drug-binding sites 2, 3 and 9, respectively.
| PDB code |
|
| Diffraction images DOI |
|
| Resolution (Å) | 50.00–2.60 (2.64–2.60) |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.979 |
| Space group |
|
|
| 170.5, 38.9, 98.5 |
| α, β, γ (°) | 90.0, 104.5, 90.0 |
| Protein chains in the asymmetric unit | 1 |
| Completeness (%) | 96.4 (88.5) |
| No. of unique reflections | 18925 (851) |
| Multiplicity | 4.2 (3.5) |
| 〈 | 16.9 (1.3) |
| CC1/2 | (0.60) |
|
| 0.081 (0.803) |
|
| 0.093 (0.925) |
|
| 0.183/0.231 |
| R.m.s.d, bond lengths (Å) | 0.002 |
| R.m.s.d, bond angles (°) | 1.1 |
| Mean ADP (Å2) | 52 |
| Mean ADP for ketoprofen molecules (Å2) | |
| ( | 24.4 [DS2], 16.6 [DS3, subsite A], 47.1 [DS3, subsite B] |
| ( | 72.1 [DS9] |
| No. of protein atoms | 4646 |
| Mean ADP for protein (Å2) | 53 |
| No. of water molecules | 192 |
| Mean ADP for water molecules (Å2) | 36 |
| Clashscore | 1.27 |
|
| 1.07 |
| Rotamer outliers (%) | 0.59 |
| Ramachandran outliers (%) | 0.0 |
| Ramachandran favored (%) | 96.23 |
Figure 2The overall structure of the complex of HSA with ketoprofen. Albumin subdomains are each shown in a different color. Roman numerals (I, II, III) are associated with domains and letters (for example IB) with subdomains. Ketoprofen molecules are shown with atoms in black spheres.
Figure 3Ketoprofen binding sites in HSA (PDB entry 7jwn). The 2mF o − DF c electron-density map (r.m.s.d. of 1.0 Å) is presented in blue and the mF o − DF c omit electron-density map (map calculated after ten REFMAC refinement cycles without the drug in the model, r.m.s.d. of 2.5 Å) is presented in green. Ketoprofen molecules are shown in stick representation with O atoms in red and C atoms in yellow. The colors of the helices correspond to the colors used in Fig. 2 ▸. The electron density and the model can be inspected interactively at https://molstack.bioreproducibility.org/project/view/VW8s7hb1Z9mnCLbg3NBU/.
The residues that participate in the binding of ketoprofen to HSA and the hydrophilic interactions observed in ketoprofen binding sites
Residues shown in bold provide a major hydrophobic contribution to drug binding.
| Drug site | Subdomains | Drug | Residues | Salt bridges and hydrogen bonds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | IIIA | ( | Arg410, | The carboxylate group of ( |
| 3, subsite A | IB | ( |
| The carboxylate group of ( |
| 3, subsite B | ( | Leu115, | The carboxylate group of ( | |
| 9 | IB and IIIA | ( | Glu184, Asp187, Glu188, | The carboxylate group of ( |
Conditions used for crystallization of SA–ketoprofen complexes and the ligands observed in the common drug-binding sites
| HSA–ketoprofen | ESA–ketoprofen | BSA–ketoprofen | LSA–ketoprofen | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDB code |
|
|
|
|
| Reference | This work | Czub | Castagna | Zielinski |
| SA source | Recombinant HSA expressed in | ESA isolated from horse blood (Equitech-Bio ESA62) | BSA isolated from bovine blood (Sigma) | LSA isolated from leporine blood (Sigma) and defatted prior to the experiment |
| Crystallization drops | An HSA (162 mg ml−1) buffered solution (50 m | An ESA (34 mg ml−1) buffered solution (10 m | A BSA (10 mg ml−1) buffered solution (10 m | An LSA (67 mg ml−1) buffered solution (10 m |
| Final ketoprofen concentration (m | 5.0 | 3.0 | 0.7 | 4.6 |
| Reservoir solution | 50 m | 100 m | 100 m | 100 m |
| DS1 | — | UNL | ( | Acetate ion |
| DS2 | ( | Fatty acid (C9:0; nonanoic acid) | — | ( |
| DS3 | Two molecules of ( | — | — | PEG molecule |
| DS4 | — | ( | — | Polymer with PDB code 2J3 |
| DS5 | Fatty acid (C14:0; myristate) | — | — | — |
| DS6 | — | ( | — | ( |
| DS7 | — | — | — | Polymer with PDB code POG |
| DS8 | Fatty acid (C14:0; myristate) | — | — | — |
| DS9 | ( | — | — | Acetate ion |
| DS10 | — | ( | — | — |
Figure 4Ketoprofen binding sites in mammalian serum albumins. Structures of ketoprofen complexes with HSA (PDB entry 7jwn), ESA (Czub et al., 2020 ▸; PDB entry 6u4r), BSA (Castagna et al., 2019 ▸; PDB entry 6qs9) and LSA (Zielinski et al., 2020 ▸; PDB entry 6ock).
Figure 5Superposition of ketoprofen binding sites in BSA (a) (PDB entry 6qs9) and LSA (b, c) (PDB entry 6ock) with analogous sites in ligand-free HSA (PDB entry 4k2c). C atoms in BSA, LSA and HSA are shown in cyan, yellow and gray, respectively. Residue numbers correspond to positions in HSA. Residues labeled in black are conserved between BSA or LSA and HSA, while those labeled in red differ. The naming scheme for differing residues is as follows: residue in BSA or LSA, residue number, corresponding residue in HSA.
Figure 6Comparison of (S)-ketoprofen binding to drug site 2 in HSA (PDB entry 7jwn) and LSA (PDB entry 6ock). The (S)-ketoprofen molecule and a molecule of a fatty acid bound to HSA are shown in stick representation with O atoms in red and C atoms in yellow, while a molecule of (S)-ketoprofen bound to LSA is shown in stick representation with O atoms in red and C atoms in gray. The colors of the helices correspond to the colors used in Fig. 2 ▸.