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Research Article

Application of temperature-dependent and steered molecular dynamics simulation to screen anti-dengue compounds against Marburg virus

, , , , , , , , , , & show all
Received 20 Jun 2023, Accepted 03 Jan 2024, Published online: 17 Jan 2024
 

Abstract

Marburg virus infections are extremely fatal with a fatality range of 23% to 90%, therefore there is an urgent requirement to design and develop efficient therapeutic molecules. Here, a comprehensive temperature-dependent molecular dynamics (MD) simulation method was implemented to identify the potential molecule from the anti-dengue compound library that can inhibit the function of the VP24 protein of Marburg. Virtual high throughput screening identified five effective binders of VP24 after screening 484 anti-dengue compounds. These compounds were treated in MD simulation at four different temperatures: 300, 340, 380, and 420 K. Higher temperatures showed dissociation of hit compounds from the protein. Further, triplicates of 100 ns MD simulation were conducted which showed that compounds ID = 118717693, and ID = 5361 showed strong stability with the protein molecule. These compounds were further validated using ΔG binding free energies and they showed: −30.38 kcal/mol, and −67.83 kcal/mol binding free energies, respectively. Later, these two compounds were used in steered MD simulation to detect its dissociation. Compound ID = 5361 showed the maximum pulling force of 199.02 kcal/mol/nm to dissociate the protein-ligand complex while ID = 118717693 had a pulling force of 101.11 kcal/mol/nm, respectively. This ligand highest number of hydrogen bonds with varying occupancies at 89.93%, 69.80%, 57.93%, 52.33%, and 50.63%. This study showed that ID = 5361 can bind with the VP24 strongly and has the potential to inhibit its function which can be validated in the in-vitro experiment.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported via funding from Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz University project number (PSAU/2023/R/1445).

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