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Research Article

Sanggenol B, a plant bioactive, as a safer alternative to tackle cancer by antagonising human FGFR

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Received 26 Apr 2023, Accepted 01 Aug 2023, Published online: 08 Aug 2023
 

Abstract

Fibroblast Growth Receptor Factor (FGFR) are a family of proteins which are, in addition to their biological role, are involved in various pathological functions, such as cancer cellular proliferation, and metastasis. Deregulation of FGFRs at various points could result in malignancy. A conformational transition of the DFG (Asp–Phe–Gly) motif can switch the enzyme from a catalytically active (DFG-in) to an inactive (DFG-out) state. There are a few FDFR inhibitors which have received approval from the FDA, but these have adverse side effects. Hence, there is a demand for safer alternatives. With this aim, Ligand and Structure based virtual screening was carried to identify suitable lead molecule. In this process, Four Featured atom-based 3D Pharmacophore with quantitative structure–activity relationship analysis (3D-QSAR) was developed. The External validation of the hypothesis was carried invoking criteria such as Area under the ROC curve. Natural plant compound databases such as the Traditional Chinese medicine, NPACT and the ZINC Natural databases were chosen for pharmacophore filtering, which was followed by virtual screening against FGFR isoforms. The compound Sanggenol B was identified as the most suitable lead molecule. Structural stability of the protein-ligand complex and interactions of the ligand (Sanggenol B & the reference compound Ponatinib) with FGFR were analysed for 1000 ns (triplicate) by means of molecular simulation and the binding free energy was calculated using MMGBSA. Sanggenol B (PubChem CID: 15233694) binds effectively at the active site with favourable energies and is proposed as a safe alternative from a natural source.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Disclosure statement

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

Additional information

Funding

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

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