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Mechanistic and structural insight into promiscuity based metabolism of cardiac drug digoxin by gut microbial enzyme
Author(s) -
Kumar Kundan,
Jaiswal Shubham K.,
Dhoke Gaurao V.,
Srivastava Gopal N.,
Sharma Ashok K.,
Sharma Vineet K.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of cellular biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.028
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1097-4644
pISSN - 0730-2312
DOI - 10.1002/jcb.26638
Subject(s) - digoxin , drug , drug metabolism , enzyme , metabolism , gut microbiome , pharmacology , chemistry , biochemistry , gut flora , binding site , computational biology , biology , medicine , heart failure
The recent advances in microbiome studies have revealed the role of gut microbiota in altering the pharmacological properties of oral drugs, which contributes to patient‐response variation and undesired effect of the drug molecule. These studies are essential to guide us for achieving the desired efficacy and pharmacological activity of the existing drug molecule or for discovering novel and more effective therapeutics. However, one of the main limitations is the lack of atomistic details on the binding and metabolism of these drug molecules by gut‐microbial enzymes. Therefore, in this study, for a well‐known and important FDA‐approved cardiac glycoside drug, digoxin, we report the atomistic details and energy economics for its binding and metabolism by the Cgr2 protein of Eggerthella lenta DSM 2243 . It was observed that the binding pocket of digoxin to Cgr2 primarily involved the negatively charged polar amino acids and a few non‐polar hydrophobic residues. The drug digoxin was found to bind Cgr2 at the same binding site as that of fumarate, which is the proposed natural substrate. However, digoxin showed a much lower binding energy (17.75 ± 2 Kcal mol −1 ) than the binding energy (42.17 ± 2 Kcal mol −1 ) of fumarate. This study provides mechanistic insights into the structural and promiscuity‐based metabolism of widely used cardiac drug digoxin and presents a methodology, which could be useful to confirm the promiscuity‐based metabolism of other orally administrated drugs by gut microbial enzymes and also help in designing strategies for improving the efficacy of the drugs.