Virtual screening against M. tuberculosis 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid synthase (MtbBioA) and in silico toxicity evaluation of top hits
College
College of Science
Department/Unit
Chemistry
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Current Enzyme Inhibition
Volume
10
First Page
105
Last Page
112
Publication Date
2014
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains to be one of the major public health concerns worldwide. The continuing emergence of Mtb strains resistant to known drugs makes the campaign for successful TB control and treatment very difficult to accomplish. It is therefore imperative to search for newer chemical entities that could inhibit the growing number of putative drug targets for the development of more efficient anti-tubercular drugs. One such ideal target is the 7, 8- diaminopelargonic acid aminotransferase enzyme (BioA). This enzyme is mainly involved in the bacterium’s lipid biosynthesis and metabolism machinery, and is considered as a very promising target due to the fact that humans lack this enzyme. In this study, structure-based pharmacophore screening, molecular docking, and ADMET evaluation of compounds obtained from the InterBioScreen Synthetic Compounds (IBS SC) were performed against the MtbBioA enzyme. Five compounds from the library showed more favorable binding energies as compared to the enzyme’s known inhibitor, amiclenomycin (ACM). Moreover, a pyridazinyladamantane 2-carboxylic acid and two sulfone derivatives have indicated good ADMET properties. These compounds are predicted to possess desirable properties of a lead and should be the sub- ject of subsequent structural optimization and experimental bioactivity evaluations.
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Recommended Citation
Billones, J. B., Carrillo, M. O., Organo, V. G., Macalino, S. Y., Emnacen, I. A., & Sy, J. A. (2014). Virtual screening against M. tuberculosis 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid synthase (MtbBioA) and in silico toxicity evaluation of top hits. Current Enzyme Inhibition, 10, 105-112. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11459
Disciplines
Medicinal-Pharmaceutical Chemistry
Keywords
Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Biotin
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