RESUMEN
Through molecular recognition, drugs can interact and complex with macromolecules circulating in the body. The serum albumin transport protein, found in several mammals, has several interaction sites where these molecules can be located. The drug sulfasalazine (SSZ) is known in the literature to complex at drug site 1 (DS1) in human serum (HSA) and bovine serum (BSA) proteins. This complexation can be studied using various spectroscopic techniques. With the techniques used in this work, absorption in the ultraviolet and visible regions (UV-Vis) and electronic circular dichroism (ECD), a significant difference was observed in the results involving HSA and BSA. The application of theoretical methodologies, such as TD-DFT and molecular docking, suggests that the conformation that SSZ assumes in DS1 of the two proteins is different, which exposes it to different amino acid residues and different hydrophobicities. This difference in conformation may be related to the location of DS1 where the drug interacts or to the possibility of SSZ moving in the BSA site, due to its larger size, and moving less freely in HSA.
Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Albúmina Sérica Bovina , Sulfasalazina , Sulfasalazina/química , Albúmina Sérica Bovina/química , Humanos , Bovinos , Animales , Estereoisomerismo , Dicroismo Circular , Albúmina Sérica Humana/química , Teoría Funcional de la DensidadRESUMEN
First antibiotic in the oxazolidinone class, linezolid fights gram-positive multiresistant bacteria by inhibiting protein synthesis through its interaction with the 50S subunit of the functional bacterial ribosome. For its antimicrobial action, it is necessary that its chiral carbon located in the oxazolidinone ring is in the S-conformation. Computational calculation at time-dependent density functional theory methodology, ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis), and electronic circular dichroism spectra was obtained for noncomplexed and complexed forms of linezolid to verify the possible chirality of nitrogen atom in the acetamide group of the molecule. The molecular system has two chiral centers. So, there are now four possible configurations: RR, RS, SR, and SS. For a better understanding of the system, the electronic spectra at the PBE0/6-311++G(3df,2p) level of theory were obtained. The complexed form was obtained from the crystallographic data of the ribosome, containing the S-linezolid molecular system. The computational results obtained for the electronic properties are in good agreement with the experimental crystallographic data and available theoretical results.