4.6 Article

Epigallocatechin Gallate with Potent Anti-Helicobacter pylori Activity Binds Efficiently to Its Histone-like DNA Binding Protein

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages 3548-3570

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.0c04763

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, India under SERB EMR Scheme [EMR/2016/001756]
  2. Fluorescence Spectroscopy facility at IIT Roorkee, India
  3. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi, India under CSIR-JRF scheme
  4. Department of Science and Technology, India under the DST-INSPIRE PhD Program

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The study focuses on finding natural compounds as alternative therapeutic options to antibiotics, evaluating their antibacterial activity against H. pylori, and exploring their binding with key proteins of H. pylori.
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori)-a human gastric pathogen-forms a major risk factor for the development of various gastric pathologies such as chronic inflammatory gastritis, peptic ulcer, lymphomas of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues, and gastric carcinoma. The complete eradication of infection is the primary objective of treating any H. pylori-associated gastric condition. However, declining eradication efficiencies, off-target effects, and patient noncompliance to prolong and broad-spectrum antibiotic treatments has spurred the clinical interest to search for alternative effective and safer therapeutic options. As natural compounds are safe and privileged with high levels of antibacterial-activity, previous studies have tested and reported a plethora of such compounds with potential in vitro/in vivo anti-H. pylon activity. However, the mode of action of majority of these natural compounds is unclear. The present study has been envisaged to compile the information of various such natural compounds and to evaluate their binding with histone-like DNA-binding proteins of H. pylori (referred here as Hup) using in silico molecular docking-based virtual screening experiments. Hup-being a major nucleoid-associated protein expressed by H. pylori-plays a strategic role in its survival and persistent colonization under hostile stress conditions. The ligand with highest binding energy with Hup-that is, epigallocatechin-(-)gallate (EGCG)-was rationally selected for further computational and experimental testing. The best docking poses of EGCG with Hup were first evaluated for their solution stability using long run molecular dynamics simulations and then using fluorescence and nuclear magnetic resonance titration experiments which demonstrated that the binding of EGCG with Hup is fairly strong (the resultant apparent dissociation constant (k(D)) values were equal to 2.61 and 3.29 +/- 0.42 mu M, respectively).

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