Kinetics and Mechanism of the Reaction between Serum Albumin and Auranofin (and Its Isopropyl Analogue) in Vitro

Inorg Chem. 1996 Jan 17;35(2):424-433. doi: 10.1021/ic9414280.

Abstract

The first detailed kinetic analysis and mechanistic interpretation of the reactions between serum albumin and the second-generation gold drug Auranofin [Et(3)PAuSATg = (triethylphosphine)(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-1-beta-D-glucopyranosato-S-) gold(I)] and its triisopropylphosphine analogue, iPr(3)PAuSATg, in vitro are reported. The reactions were investigated using Penefsky spun columns and NMR saturation transfer methods. Under the Penefsky chromatography conditions with 0.4-0.6 mM albumin and a wide range of Et(3)PAuSATg concentrations, the reaction is biphasic. The fast phase is apparently first order in albumin with a rate constant [k(1) = 3.4 +/- 0.3 x 10(-)(2) s(-)(1)] that decreases slightly in magnitude and becomes intermediate in order at low gold concentrations, [Et(3)PAuSATg] < [AlbSH]; it accounts for approximately 95% of the Au(I) that binds. A minor, slower step [k(2) = 2.3 +/- 0.3 x 10(-)(3) s(-)(1)), which accounts for only 5% of the reaction, is also first order with respect to albumin, and zero order with respect to auranofin. For iPr(3)PAuSATg, only the first step was observed, k(1) = (1.4 +/- 0.1) x 10(-)(2) s(-)(1), and is first order in albumin and independent of the iPr(3)PAuSATg concentration. (31)P-NMR saturation transfer experiments utilizing iPr(3)PAuSATg, under equilibrium conditions, yielded second-order rate constants for both the forward (1.2 x 10(2) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and the reverse (3.9 x 10(1) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) directions. A multistep mechanism involving a conformationally altered albumin species was developed. Albumin domain IA opens with concomitant Cys-34 rearrangement, allowing facile gold binding and exchange, and then closes. In conjunction with the steady-state approximation, this mechanism accounts for the different reaction orders observed under the two set of conditions. The rate-determining conformational change of albumin governs the reaction as monitored by the Penefsky columns. Rapid second order exchange of R(3)PAuSATg at the exposed Cys-34 residue is observed under the NMR conditions. The mechanism predicts that under physiological conditions where [Et(3)PAuSATg] is 10-25 &mgr;M, the reaction will be second order and rapid with a rate constant of 8 +/- 2 x 10(2) M(-)(1) s(-)(1). The Penefsky spun columns revealed a previously unreported and novel binding mechanism, association of auranofin in the pocket of albumin-disulfide species, which was confirmed by Hummel-Dreyer gel chromatographic techniques under equilibrium conditions. This albumin-auranofin complex (AlbSSR-Et(3)PAuSATg) is weakly bound and readily dissociates during conventional gel exclusion chromatography.