Abstract
Background: Curcumin reduces the proliferation of cancer cells through inhibition of the DYRK2 enzyme, which is a positive regulator of the 26S proteasome. Methods: In the present work, curcumin analogues have been screened from the MolPort database using a pharmacophore model that comprised a ligand-based approach. The result of the screening was then evaluated by molecular docking and molecular dynamics based on binding the free energy of the interaction between each compound with the binding pocket of DYRK2. The hit compounds were then confirmed by absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) prediction. Results: Screening of 7.4 million molecules from the MolPort database afforded six selected hit compounds. By considering the ADME prediction, three prospective curcumin analogues have been selected. These are: 2‐[2‐(1‐methylpyrazol‐4‐yl)ethyl]‐1H,5H,6H,7H,8H‐imidazo[4,5‐c]azepin‐4‐one (Molport-035-369-361), methyl 4‐(3‐hydroxy‐1,2‐oxazol‐5‐yl)piperidine‐1‐carboxylate (Molport-000-004-273) and (1S)‐1‐[5‐(furan‐3‐carbonyl)‐4H,6H,7H‐pyrazolo[1,5‐a]pyrazin‐2‐yl]ethanol (MolPort-035-585-822). Conclusion: Pharmacophore modelling, combined with molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation, as well as ADME prediction were successfully applied to screen curcumin analogues from the MolPort database as DYRK2 inhibitors. All selected compounds that have better predicted pharmacokinetic properties than that of curcumin are considered for further study.
Funder
Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia
Bandung Institute of Technology
Subject
General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
8 articles.
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