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Binding of fluphenazine with human serum albumin in the presence of rutin and quercetin: An evaluation of food‐drug interaction by spectroscopic techniques
Author(s) -
Jing JiaoJiao,
Liu Bin,
Wang Xin,
Wang Xin,
He LingLing,
Guo XueYuan,
Xu MingLing,
Li QianYu,
Gao Bo,
Dong BoYang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
luminescence
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.428
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1522-7243
pISSN - 1522-7235
DOI - 10.1002/bio.3291
Subject(s) - chemistry , human serum albumin , hydrogen bond , circular dichroism , fluorescence , quenching (fluorescence) , enthalpy , fluorescence spectroscopy , hydrophobic effect , rutin , quercetin , biophysics , crystallography , chromatography , molecule , biochemistry , organic chemistry , thermodynamics , physics , antioxidant , quantum mechanics , biology
The interactions between human serum albumin (HSA) and fluphenazine (FPZ) in the presence or absence of rutin or quercetin were studied by fluorescence, absorption and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy and molecular modeling. The results showed that the fluorescence quenching mechanism was static quenching by the formation of an HSA–FPZ complex. Entropy change (Δ S 0 ) and enthalpy change (Δ H 0 ) values were 68.42 J/(mol ⋅ K) and −4.637 kJ/mol, respectively, which indicated that hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds played major roles in the acting forces. The interaction process was spontaneous because the Gibbs free energy change (Δ G 0 ) values were negative. The results of competitive experiments demonstrated that FPZ was mainly located within HSA site I (sub‐domain IIA). Molecular docking results were in agreement with the experimental conclusions of the thermodynamic parameters and competition experiments. Competitive binding to HSA between flavonoids and FPZ decreased the association constants and increased the binding distances of FPZ binding to HSA. The results of absorption, synchronous fluorescence, three‐dimensional fluorescence, and CD spectra showed that the binding of FPZ to HSA caused conformational changes in HSA and simultaneous effects of FPZ and flavonoids induced further HSA conformational changes.