4.7 Article

Screening of Natural Compounds as P-Glycoprotein Inhibitors against Multidrug Resistance

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9040357

Keywords

flavonoids; molecular dynamics; molecular docking; multidrug resistance; natural compounds; P-glycoprotein; structure-based virtual screening

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (Ministerstvo Skolstvi, Mladeze a Telovychovy) of the Czech Republic [LQ1605, LM2018131, LM2018121, CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_026/000845, MUNI/A/1325/2020]
  2. European Union [720776, 814418]
  3. project e-Infrastruktura CZ (e-INFRA) within the program Projects of Large Research, Development and Innovations Infrastructures [LM2018140]

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In this study, a computational approach was used to construct the full-length three-dimensional structure of human P-gp and refine it with molecular dynamics. Through docking experiments, certain natural flavonoids were identified as effective P-gp inhibitors, increasing the accumulation of doxorubicin in cancer cells and enhancing its antiproliferative activity.
Multidrug resistance (MDR) is a common problem when fighting cancer with chemotherapy. P-glycoprotein (P-gp, or MDR1) is an active pump responsible for the efflux of xenobiotics out of the cell, including anti-cancer drugs. It is a validated target against MDR. No crystal structure of the human P-gp is available to date, and only recently several cryo-EM structures have been solved. In this paper, we present a comprehensive computational approach that includes constructing the full-length three-dimensional structure of the human P-gp and its refinement using molecular dynamics. We assessed its flexibility and conformational diversity, compiling a dynamical ensemble that was used to dock a set of lignan compounds, previously reported as active P-gp inhibitors, and disclose their binding modes. Based on the statistical analysis of the docking results, we selected a system for performing the structure-based virtual screening of new potential P-gp inhibitors. We tested the method on a library of 87 natural flavonoids described in the literature, and 10 of those were experimentally assayed. The results reproduced the theoretical predictions only partially due to various possible factors. However, at least two of the predicted natural flavonoids were demonstrated to be effective P-gp inhibitors. They were able to increase the accumulation of doxorubicin inside the human promyelocytic leukemia HL60/MDR cells overexpressing P-gp and potentiate the antiproliferative activity of this anti-cancer drug.

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