Binding of Sulfonamides to Erythrocytes and Their Components

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Abstract

Binding of zonisamide, a new antiepileptic sulfonamide derivative, was examined to human erythrocytes, their lysate and their carbonic anhydrase by centrifugation for cells or by ultrafiltration for the others. Scatchard plots revealed that the binding to intact and lysed cells was composed of high- and low-affinity components and that to carbonic anhydrase, of the high-affinity component alone. Parameters for high-affinity binding were similar in all three preparations and those for low-affinity binding were similar in the former two preparations. Dissociation constants for these bindings to erythrocytes were smaller than the dissociation constant for serum albumin. These results may explain the concentration of sulfonamides in red cells, and suggest the participation of cellular protein component(s) in addition to previously known carbonic anhydrase in the binding.Acetazolamide, sulthiame, zonisamide, hydrochlorothiazide and sulfanilamide inhibited carbonic anhydrase in a non-competitive manner to different extents. The K_i values of these sulfonamides were of the order of 0.1-0.2 of their respective K_d values determined by ultrafiltration, suggesting that under the present conditions, physicochemical interactions between sulfonamides and carbonic anhydrase primarily occur at common sites that affect the activity of the enzyme.

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