Identification of New Mycobacterium tuberculosis Proteasome Inhibitors Using a Knowledge-Based Computational Screening Approach

Author:

Almeleebia Tahani M.,Shahrani Mesfer Al,Alshahrani Mohammad Y.ORCID,Ahmad IrfanORCID,Alkahtani Abdullah M.,Alam Md JahoorORCID,Kausar Mohd AdnanORCID,Saeed Amir,Saeed Mohd,Iram Sana

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is a deadly tuberculosis (TB)-causing pathogen. The proteasome is vital to the survival of Mtb and is therefore validated as a potential target for anti-TB therapy. Mtb resistance to existing antibacterial agents has enhanced drastically, becoming a worldwide health issue. Therefore, new potential therapeutic agents need to be developed that can overcome the complications of TB. With this purpose, in the present study, 224,205 natural compounds from the ZINC database have been screened against the catalytic site of Mtb proteasome by the computational approach. The best scoring hits, ZINC3875469, ZINC4076131, and ZINC1883067, demonstrated robust interaction with Mtb proteasome with binding energy values of −7.19, −7.95, and −7.21 kcal/mol for the monomer (K-chain) and −8.05, −9.10, and −7.07 kcal/mol for the dimer (both K and L chains) of the beta subunit, which is relatively higher than that of reference compound HT1171 (−5.83 kcal/mol (monomer) and −5.97 kcal/mol (dimer)). In-depth molecular docking of top-scoring compounds with Mtb proteasome reveals that amino acid residues Thr1, Arg19, Ser20, Thr21, Gln22, Gly23, Asn24, Lys33, Gly47, Asp124, Ala126, Trp129, and Ala180 are crucial in binding. Furthermore, a molecular dynamics study showed steady-state interaction of hit compounds with Mtb proteasome. Computational prediction of physicochemical property assessment showed that these hits are non-toxic and possess good drug-likeness properties. This study proposed that these compounds could be utilized as potential inhibitors of Mtb proteasome to combat TB infection. However, there is a need for further bench work experiments for their validation as inhibitors of Mtb proteasome.

Funder

Research Center of Advanced Materials—King Khalid University, Saudi Arabia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Chemistry (miscellaneous),Analytical Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Molecular Medicine,Drug Discovery,Pharmaceutical Science

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