4.5 Article

Anti-tubercular activity evaluation of natural compounds by targeting Mycobacterium tuberculosis resuscitation promoting factor B inhibition: An in silico study

Journal

MOLECULAR DIVERSITY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11030-023-10632-8

Keywords

Infectious diseases; Tuberculosis; Dormancy; RpfB

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This study used a computational drug design pipeline to screen potential compounds from the NP-lib database for their inhibitory effect on the RpfB protein of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Molecular dynamics simulation and principal component analysis confirmed the effectiveness of the top 5 hits, with three compounds showing significant binding to the functional site of the RpfB protein. The results suggest promising potential for these compounds as anti-tuberculosis drugs, but further experimental validation is needed.
Tuberculosis (TB), an infectious disease caused by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), has been responsible for the deaths of millions of individuals around the globe. A vital protein in viral pathogenesis known as resuscitation promoting factor (RpfB) has been identified as a potential therapeutic target of anti-tuberculosis drugs. This study offered an in silico process to examine possible RpfB inhibitors employing a computational drug design pipeline. In this study, a total of 1228 phytomolecules were virtually tested against the RpfB of Mtb. These phytomolecules were sourced from the NP-lib database of the MTi-OpenScreen server, and five top hits (ZINC000044404209, ZINC000059779788, ZINC000001562130, ZINC000014766825, and ZINC000043552589) were prioritized for compute intensive docking with dock score <= - 8.5 kcal/mole. Later, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and principal component analysis (PCA) were used to validate these top five hits. In the list of these top five hits, the ligands ZINC000044404209, ZINC000059779788, and ZINC000043552589 showed hydrogen bond formation with the functional residue Glu(292) of the RpfB protein suggesting biological significance of the binding. The RMSD study showed stable protein-ligand complexes and higher conformational consistency for the ligands ZINC000014766825, and ZINC000043552589 with RMSD 3-4 angstrom during 100 ns MD simulation. The overall analysis performed in the study suggested promising binding of these compounds with the RpfB protein of the Mtb at its functional site, further experimental investigation is needed to validate the computational finding.

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