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Research Articles

Structure and dynamic simulation-based interactions of benzenoids, pyrroles and organooxygen compounds for effective targeting of GPX4 in ischemic stroke

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Pages 9143-9156 | Received 03 Aug 2022, Accepted 23 Oct 2022, Published online: 03 Nov 2022
 

Abstract

The discovery of a novel drug for ischemic stroke is plagued by expensive and unsuccessful outcomes. FDA-approved drugs could be a viable repurposing strategy for stroke therapy. Emerging evidence suggests the regulating role of Glutathione peroxidase (GPX4) in stroke and attracts as a potential target. To overcome limited therapeutic interventions, a drug repurposing in silico investigation of FDA-approved drugs is proposed for the GPX4 receptor in distinctive species (Homo sapiens and Mus musculus). The GPX4 UniProt wild type ids, that is, P36969 (Homo sapiens), P36970 (Rattus norvegicus) and O70325 (Mus musculus) are Swiss modelled, and resultant templates are 2OBI and 6HN3 for Homo sapiens, and 5L71 for Mus musculus with a sequence identity of ∼88%. Enrichment analysis reveals high sensitivity and ranked actives with ROC and AUC values of 0.59 and 0.61, respectively. Virtual screening at extra precision resulted hit Acarbosum, is similar between 2OBI and 6HN3, demonstrating a multiple-target specificity and Iopromide, targeting 2OBI. MD simulation at 100 ns following trajectory analysis provides RMSD (∼1.2–1.8Å), RMSF (∼1.6–2.7Å), Rgyr (∼15–15.6Å) depicting stabilisation of receptor–ligand complexes. Furthermore, average B-factor value of 2OBI, 6HN3 and 5L71 is 25Å, 24Å and 60Å with a defined resolution of 1.55Å, 1.01Å and 1.80Å, respectively, depicting the thermodynamic stability of the protein structures. The dynamic cross-correlation and principal component analysis of residual fluctuations reveal more positive correlation, high atomic displacements and greater residual clustering of residues from atomic coordinates. Therefore, Acarbosum, an FDA-approved drug, could act as a potential repurposing drug with a multi-target approach translating from preclinical to clinical stages.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Funding

The author(s) reported there is no funding associated with the work featured in this article.

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