Size Dependence of Steric Shielding and Multivalency Effects for Globular Binding Inhibitors
Author(s) -
Jonathan Vonnemann,
Susanne Liese,
Christian Kuehne,
Kai Ludwig,
Jens Dernedde,
Christoph Böttcher,
Roland R. Netz,
Rainer Haag
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja5114084
Subject(s) - chemistry , steric effects , shielding effect , dissociation constant , virus , ic50 , electromagnetic shielding , biophysics , nanoparticle , in vitro , particle size , nanotechnology , stereochemistry , biochemistry , virology , organic chemistry , receptor , layer (electronics) , electrical engineering , biology , engineering , materials science
Competitive binding inhibitors based on multivalent nanoparticles have shown great potential for preventing virus infections. However, general design principles of highly efficient inhibitors are lacking as the quantitative impact of factors such as virus concentration, inhibitor size, steric shielding, or multivalency effects in the inhibition process is not known. Based on two complementary experimental inhibition assays we determined size-dependent steric shielding and multivalency effects. This allowed us to adapt the Cheng-Prusoff equation for its application to multivalent systems. Our results show that the particle and volume normalized IC50 value of an inhibitor at very low virus concentration predominantly depends on its multivalent association constant, which itself exponentially increases with the inhibitor/virus contact area and ligand density. Compared to multivalency effects, the contribution of steric shielding to the IC50 values is only minor, and its impact is only noticeable if the multivalent dissociation constant is far below the virus concentration, which means if all inhibitors are bound to the virus. The dependence of the predominant effect, either steric shielding or multivalency, on the virus concentration has significant implications on the in vitro testing of competitive binding inhibitors and determines optimal inhibitor diameters for the efficient inhibition of viruses.
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