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Structural and energetic understanding of novel natural inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis malate synthase
Author(s) -
Shukla Rohit,
Shukla Harish,
Tripathi Timir
Publication year - 2019
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.27538
Subject(s) - malate synthase , mycobacterium tuberculosis , glyoxylate cycle , docking (animal) , isocitrate lyase , biochemistry , citrate synthase , chemistry , stereochemistry , enzyme , biology , tuberculosis , medicine , nursing , pathology
Abstract Persistent infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis requires the glyoxylate shunt. This is a bypass to the tricarboxylic acid cycle in which isocitrate lyase (ICL) and malate synthase (MS) catalyze the net incorporation of carbon during mycobacterial growth on acetate or fatty acids as the primary carbon source. To identify a potential antitubercular compound, we performed a structure‐based screening of natural compounds from the ZINC database (n = 1 67 740) against the M tuberculosis MS (MtbMS) structure. The ligands were screened against MtbMS, and 354 ligands were found to have better docking score. These compounds were assessed for Lipinski and absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and toxicity prediction where 15 compounds were found to fit well for redocking studies. After refinement by molecular docking and drug‐likeness analysis, four potential inhibitors (ZINC1483899, ZINC1754310, ZINC2269664, and ZINC15729522) were identified. These four ligands with phenyl‐diketo acid were further subjected to molecular dynamics simulation to compare the dynamics and stability of the protein structure after ligand binding. The binding energy analysis was calculated to determine the intermolecular interactions. Our results suggested that the four compounds had a binding free energy of −201.96, −242.02, −187.03, and −169.02 kJ·mol −1 , for compounds with IDs ZINC1483899, ZINC1754310, ZINC2269664, and ZINC15729522, respectively. We concluded that two compounds (ZINC1483899 and ZINC1754310) displayed considerable structural and pharmacological properties and could be probable drug candidates to fight against M tuberculosis parasites.

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