Litcius/Paper detail

Interaction of Conazole Pesticides Epoxiconazole and Prothioconazole with Human and Bovine Serum Albumin Studied Using Spectroscopic Methods and Molecular Modeling

Katarína Golianová, Samuel Havadej, Valéria Verebová, Jozef Uličný, Beáta Holečková, Jana Staničová

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The interactions of epoxiconazole and prothioconazole with human serum albumin and bovine serum albumin were investigated using spectroscopic methods complemented with molecular modeling. Spectroscopic techniques showed the formation of pesticide/serum albumin complexes with the static type as the dominant mechanism. The association constants ranged from 3.80 × 104–6.45 × 105 L/mol depending on the pesticide molecule (epoxiconazole, prothioconazole) and albumin type (human or bovine serum albumin). The calculated thermodynamic parameters revealed that the binding of pesticides into serum albumin macromolecules mainly depended on hydrogen bonds and van der Waals interactions. Synchronous fluorescence spectroscopy and the competitive experiments method showed that pesticides bind to subdomain IIA, near tryptophan; in the case of bovine serum albumin also on the macromolecule surface. Concerning prothioconazole, we observed the existence of an additional binding site at the junction of domains I and III of serum albumin macromolecules. These observations were corroborated well by molecular modeling predictions. The conformation changes in secondary structure were characterized by circular dichroism, three-dimensional fluorescence, and UV/VIS absorption methods.

Topics & Concepts

Circular dichroismChemistryBovine serum albuminTryptophanAlbuminSerum albuminMacromoleculeHydrogen bondHuman serum albuminProtein secondary structureFluorescence spectroscopyFluorescenceChromatographyBiochemistryMoleculeOrganic chemistryAmino acidPhysicsQuantum mechanicsProtein Interaction Studies and Fluorescence AnalysisDrug Transport and Resistance MechanismsSurfactants and Colloidal Systems