Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1213229 Journal of Chromatography B 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Stereoselectivity in protein binding can have a significant effect on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of chiral drugs. In this paper, the enantioselective binding of propanocaine (PRO) enantiomers to human serum albumin (HSA), the most relevant plasmatic protein in view of stereoselectivity, has been evaluated by incubation and ultrafiltration of racemic PRO–HSA mixtures and chiral analysis of the bound and unbound fractions by electrokinetic chromatography using HSA as chiral selector. Experimental conditions for the separation of PRO enantiomers using HSA as chiral selector and electrokinetic chromatography have been optimised. Affinity constants and protein binding in percentage (PB) were obtained for both enantiomers of PRO, as well as the enantioselectivity (ES) to HSA. Data were obtained in two independent working sessions (days). The influence of the session and fraction processed factors were examined. A univariate direct-estimation approach was used facilitating outliers’ identification and statistical comparison. Non-linear fitting of data was used to verify the stoichiometry and affinity estimations obtained by the direct approach. Robust statistics were applied to obtain reliable estimations of uncertainty, accounting for the factors (day and processed fraction), thus representing intermediate precision conditions. Mimicking in vivo experimental conditions, information unapproachable by in vivo experiments was obtained for PRO enantiomers interacting with HSA. For the first (E1) and the second (E2) eluted PRO enantiomers the results were: 1:1 stoichiometry, medium affinity constants, log KE1 = 3.20 ± 0.16 and log KE2 = 3.40 ± 0.14, medium protein binding percentage, PB = 48.7 and 60.1% for E1 and E2, respectively, and moderate but significant enantioselectivity, ES = KE2/KE1 = 1.5 ± 0.3.

► First evidence on enantioselective binding of propanocaine to human serum albumin. ► Approximate in vivo conditions allows in vitro data unapproachable from in vivo assays. ► Optimised experimental design reduces methodological errors. ► Direct equations enable statistical advantages and robust results. ► Data from two days and two processed fractions provide reliable uncertainty.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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