Satabdi Saha, Anupama Sharma, Deep Bhowmik, Diwakar Kumar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL), the second neglected tropical disease caused by various Leishmania species, presents a significant public health challenge due to limited treatment options and the absence of vaccines. The agent responsible for visceral leishmaniasis, also referred to as "black fever" in India, is Leishmania donovani. This study focuses on L. donovani Minichromosome maintenance 10 (LdMcm10), a crucial protein in the DNA replication machinery, as a potential therapeutic target in Leishmania therapy using in silico and in vitro approaches. We employed bioinformatics tools, molecular docking, and molecular dynamics simulations to predict potential inhibitors against the target protein. The research revealed that the target protein lacks homologues in the host, emphasizing its potential as a drug target. Ligands from the DrugBank database were screened against LdMcm10 using PyRx software. The top three compounds, namely suramin, vapreotide, and pasireotide, exhibiting the best docking scores, underwent further investigation through molecular dynamic simulation and in vitro analysis. The observed structural dynamics suggested that LdMcm10-ligand complexes maintained consistent binding throughout the 300 ns simulation period, with minimal variations in their backbone. These findings suggest that these three compounds hold promise as potential lead compounds for developing new drugs against leishmaniasis. In vitro experiments also demonstrated a dose-dependent reduction in L. donovani viability for suramin, vapreotide, and pasireotide, with computed IC50 values providing quantitative metrics of their anti-leishmanial efficacy. The research offers a comprehensive understanding of LdMcm10 as a drug target and provides a foundation for further investigations and clinical exploration, ultimately advancing drug discovery strategies for leishmaniasis treatment.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Diversity is a new publication forum for the rapid publication of refereed papers dedicated to describing the development, application and theory of molecular diversity and combinatorial chemistry in basic and applied research and drug discovery. The journal publishes both short and full papers, perspectives, news and reviews dealing with all aspects of the generation of molecular diversity, application of diversity for screening against alternative targets of all types (biological, biophysical, technological), analysis of results obtained and their application in various scientific disciplines/approaches including:
combinatorial chemistry and parallel synthesis;
small molecule libraries;
microwave synthesis;
flow synthesis;
fluorous synthesis;
diversity oriented synthesis (DOS);
nanoreactors;
click chemistry;
multiplex technologies;
fragment- and ligand-based design;
structure/function/SAR;
computational chemistry and molecular design;
chemoinformatics;
screening techniques and screening interfaces;
analytical and purification methods;
robotics, automation and miniaturization;
targeted libraries;
display libraries;
peptides and peptoids;
proteins;
oligonucleotides;
carbohydrates;
natural diversity;
new methods of library formulation and deconvolution;
directed evolution, origin of life and recombination;
search techniques, landscapes, random chemistry and more;