Abstract
This paper reports a variety of experimental observations which strongly support the assumption that the warfarin binding site, or site I of human serum albumin, is better described as the warfarin-azapropazone binding area, consisting of the overlapping binding sites for warfarin and azapropazone. In general, drugs interacting with one of the two sites will also displace drugs bound to the other site, although their displacing potencies for both sites may vary considerably. This is most pronounced in the case of glibenclamide, which strongly inhibits the binding of drugs to the azapropazone site with only minor effects on drugs bound to the warfarin site. The lone tryptophan residue of human serum albumin, previously shown to be part of the warfarin binding site, is obviously located in the not-overlapping part of the warfarin site, so that its modification affects only the binding of drugs to the warfarin and not to the azapropazone site of this large binding area. The observation of different but overlapping binding sites might explain the fact that the albumin binding of drugs which seem to be bound to similar sites because of their mutual displacement can be affected differently during several disease states.
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