| Literature DB >> 23281834 |
Abhinav Grover1, Shashank Prakash Katiyar, Jeyaraman Jeyakanthan, Vikash Kumar Dubey, Durai Sundar.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leishmaniasis is caused by several species of leishmania protozoan and is one of the major vector-born diseases after malaria and sleeping sickness. Toxicity of available drugs and drug resistance development by protozoa in recent years has made Leishmaniasis cure difficult and challenging. This urges the need to discover new antileishmanial-drug targets and antileishmanial-drug development.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23281834 PMCID: PMC3521472 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-13-S7-S20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1RMSD trajectory of the modeled LPKC protein backbone during the 15ns long MD simulations. Duration of MD simulations is scaled on X-axis and Y-axis represents the RMSD deviation of protein structure in Å.
Figure 2RMSD in the ROG of LPKC protein during the 15ns long MD simulations. Duration of MD simulations is scaled on X-axis and Y-axis represents the RMSD deviation of protein structure in Å.
Figure 3All atom superimposition of modeled LPKC protein structure before and after the simulation. Helices (blue and yellow), sheets (red and green) and loops (black and brown) are shown in different colors for first and last frame respectively.
Figure 4Variation in number of Intra-H-bonds during the 15ns MD simulations of LPKC.
Figure 5Root Mean Square Fluctuation (RMSF) of all residues of LPKC protein during the MD simulations.
XP Docking scores and Binding energies of LPKC with natural compounds
| Complex | XP Glide Score | Prime/MM-GBSA binding-free energy (dG)(kcal/mol) |
|---|---|---|
| Withaferin A-LPKC complex | -6.01 | -28.47/-17.97 |
| Withanone-LPKC complex | -6.41 | -22.57/-18.31 |
Figure 6Docking complexes of LPKC with natural compounds A) Withaferin A within the binding pocket of LPKC after virtual molecular docking. B) Withanone within the binding pocket of LPKC after virtual molecular docking. Both ligands are shown to occupy the binding site.
Figure 7RMSD trajectory of the withaferin A in withaferin A-LPKC complex (red) and withanone in withanone-LPKC complex (green). Duration of MD simulations is scaled on X-axis and Y-axis represents the RMSD deviation of protein structure in Å.
Interaction profile of LPKC with natural compounds
| Type of Interaction | Withaferin A (before MD) | Withaferin A (after MD) | Withanone (before MD) | Withanone (after MD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thr62, Ala63, Glu79, Asn128 | Ala63 | Ala63, Glu79 | Glu79 | |
| Arg17, Leu53, Leu64, Met78, Ala81, Thr131, Cys139 | Leu54, Thr62, Met78, Glu79, Ala81, Gln85, Thr131, Ala133, Cys139, Asp140 | Arg17, Gln19, Glu39, Leu53, Thr62, Leu64, Met78, Ala81, | Gln19, Thr62, Met78, Ala81 |
Figure 8Interactions between LPKC and withaferin A drawn by Ligplot. Figure shows the changes in interactions and conformation of bound withaferin A with LPKC during 10ns MD simulations. A) Change in interaction profile of withaferin A-LPKC complex during the MD simulations. B) Superimposed withaferin A-LPKC complex structures before the simulation (red) and after the simulation (green). Blue circles specify the regions of conformational change in withaferin A structure.
Figure 9Interactions between LPKC and withanone drawn by Ligplot. Figure shows the changes in interactions and conformation of bound withanone with LPKC during 10ns MD simulations. A) Change in interaction profile of withanone-LPKC complex during the MD simulations. B) Superimposed withanone-LPKC complex structures before the simulations (red) and after the simulations (green).