Literature DB >> 27498028

Protein kinase C-δ inhibitor, Rottlerin inhibits growth and survival of mycobacteria exclusively through Shikimate kinase.

Sapna Pandey1, Aditi Chatterjee1, Swati Jaiswal1, Sanjay Kumar2, Ravishankar Ramachandran2, Kishore K Srivastava3.   

Abstract

The molecular bases of disease provide exceptional prospect to translate research findings into new drugs. Nevertheless, to develop new and novel chemical entities takes huge amount of time and efforts, mainly due to the stringent processes. Therefore, drug repurposing is one of such strategies which is being used in recent times to identify new pharmacophores. The essential first step in discovery of the specific inhibitor with low toxicity is the identification and elucidation of pathways exclusive to target pathogen. One such target is the shikimate pathway, which is essential for algae, higher plants, bacteria and fungi. Since, this enzyme system is absent in higher eukaryotes and in mammals, the enzymes involved in the pathway provide an attractive target for the development of potentially selective and non toxic antimicrobial agents. Since, so far there is no specific inhibitor which is able to restrain mycobacterial shikimate pathway; we expanded the use of a known kinase inhibitor; Rottlerin, in order to predict the prototype in discovering the specific molecules against this enzyme. For the first time we have shown that Rottlerin inhibits extracellular mycobacteria by affecting Shikimate Kinase (SK) and this effect is further enhanced during the intracellular infection due to the added effect of PKC- δ down-regulation. The molecular docking of Rottlerin with both the mycobacterial SKs, corroborated the inhibition data, and revealed that the effects of SK, in slow and in fast grower mycobacteria are due to the changes in affinity of binding with the drug.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mycobacteria; PKC-δ; Rottlerin; Shikimate kinase

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27498028     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2016.08.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun        ISSN: 0006-291X            Impact factor:   3.575


  1 in total

1.  Rottlerin plays an antiviral role at early and late steps of Zika virus infection.

Authors:  Shili Zhou; Quanshi Lin; Changbai Huang; Xiaotong Luo; Xu Tian; Chao Liu; Ping Zhang
Journal:  Virol Sin       Date:  2022-08-05       Impact factor: 6.947

  1 in total

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