Standardization of a preparative ultracentrifuge method for quantitative determination or protein binding of seven antibiotics
- PMID: 925383
- DOI: 10.1093/infdis/136.6.778
Standardization of a preparative ultracentrifuge method for quantitative determination or protein binding of seven antibiotics
Abstract
A preparative ultracentrifuge method was standardized for determination of quantitative binding of cephalothin, cefamandole, cefazolin, cefaclor, erythromycin, gentamicin, and chloramphenicol to human serum proteins. At achievable in vivo concentrations, serum binding was 78.5% for cephalothin, 79.9% for cefamandole, 88.5% for cefazolin, 23.5% for cefaclor, 41.9% for erythromycin, 22.7% for gentamicin, and 59.5% for chloramphenicol. Techniques that use semipermeable cellophane or diaflow membranes, cross-linked dextran, inhibition of bacterial growth, protein precipitation, or liquid partitioning all have inherent problems with either the ligand or the antibiotic adversely interacting with the experimental apparatus. Ultracentrifugation provides a rapid, reproducible technique for protein-binding determinations of the classes of antibiotics described.
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