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Research Articles

Flavanones: A potential natural inhibitor of the ATP binding site of PknG of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 11885-11899 | Received 14 Sep 2020, Accepted 03 Aug 2021, Published online: 19 Aug 2021
 

Abstract

Over the years, Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been one of the major causes of death worldwide. As several clinical isolates of the bacteria have developed drug resistance against the target sites of the current therapeutic agents, the development of a novel drug is the pressing priority. According to recent studies on Mycobacterium tuberculosis, ATP binding sites of Mycobacterium tuberculosis serine/threonine protein kinases (MTPKs) have been identified as the new promising drug target. Among the several other protein kinases (PKs), Protein kinase G (PknG) was selected for the study because of its crucial role in modulating bacterium’s metabolism to survive in host macrophages. In this work, we have focused on the H37Rv strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A list of 477 flavanones obtained from the PubChem database was docked one by one against the crystallized and refined structure of PknG by in-silico techniques. Initially, potential inhibitors were narrowed down by preliminary docking. Flavanones were then selected using binding energies ranging from −7.9 kcal.mol−1 to −10.8 kcal.mol−1. This was followed by drug-likeness prediction, redocking analysis, and molecular dynamics simulations. Here, we have used experimentally confirmed drug AX20017 as a reference to determine candidate compounds that can act as potential inhibitors for PknG. PubChem165506, PubChem242065, PubChem688859, PubChem101367767, PubChem3534982, and PubChem42607933 were identified as possible target site inhibitors for PknG with a desirable negative binding energy of −8.1, −8.3, −8.4, −8.8, −8.6 and −7.9 kcal.mol−1 respectively.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

Author’s contributions

S.P.S, designed and performed experiments and helped in the writing, S.G, performed preliminary docking analysis and helped in the writing, N.D performed docking interaction studies, multiple sequence alignment and helped in the writing, S.S performed drug-likeness prediction studies and helped in the writing, A.S.G ran the MDS and generated the corresponding figures and plots, T.C.C.F analyzed and discussed the MDS results, T.C.R. analyzed the MDS results and revised the text, S.S performed drug-likeness prediction studies and helped in the writing, U.N performed the redocking experiments and helped in the writing, D.D helped in data analysis, editing and writing and N.M devised and supervised experiments, analyzed data and helped in writing the manuscript.

Additional information

Funding

The authors wish to thank the financial support of the Brazilian agencies: CNPq (grant no 308225/2018-0), FAPERJ (grant no E-02/202.961/2017), IFES—PRPPG, grant number 10/2019 (Productivity Researcher Program PPP), and FAPES (grant number 03/2020-2020-WMT5F). This work was also supported by the University of Hradec Králové.

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