| Literature DB >> 34589547 |
Rawaba Arif1, Sajjad Ahmad2, Ghulam Mustafa1, Hafiza Salaha Mahrosh1, Muhammad Ali3, Muhammad Tahir Ul Qamar4, Hafiza Rabia Dar5.
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus termed as metabolic disorder is a collection of interlinked diseases and mainly body's inability to manage glucose level which leads to cardiovascular diseases, renal failure, neurological disorders, and many others. The drugs contemporarily used for diabetes have many inevitable side effects, and many of them have become less responsive to this multifactorial disorder. Momordica charantia commonly known as bitter gourd has many bioactive compounds with antidiabetic properties. The current study was designed to use computational methods to discover the best antidiabetic peptides devised from hypoglycemic polypeptide-P of M. charantia. The binding affinity and interaction patterns of peptides were evaluated against four receptor proteins (i.e., as agonists of insulin receptor and inhibitors of sodium-glucose cotransporter 1, dipeptidyl peptidase-IV, and glucose transporter 2) using molecular docking approach. A total of thirty-seven peptides were docked against these receptors. Out of which, top five peptides against each receptor were shortlisted based on their S-scores and binding affinities. Finally, the eight best ligands (i.e., LIVA, TSEP, EKAI, LKHA, EALF, VAEK, DFGAS, and EPGGGG) were selected as these ligands strictly followed Lipinski's rule of five and exhibited good ADMET profiling. One peptide EPGGGG showed activity towards insulin and SGLT1 receptor proteins. The top complex for both these targets was subjected to 50 ns of molecular dynamics simulations and MM-GBSA binding energy test that concluded both complexes as highly stable, and the intermolecular interactions were dominated by van der Waals and electrostatic energies. Overall, the selected ligands strongly fulfilled the drug-like evaluation criterion and proved to have good antidiabetic properties.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34589547 PMCID: PMC8476269 DOI: 10.1155/2021/5561129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Docking of KDDGHL peptide with insulin receptor. (a) Interactions of peptide with IR. In these interactions, His1058 is a basic amino acid and acting as a sidechain donor. Glu1108, Glu1115, and Asp1143 are acidic amino acids and acting as sidechain acceptors. (b) Binding pattern of KDDGHL with the binding pocket of IR.
Property profile of selected peptides against five selected receptor proteins.
| Sr. No. | Peptide | Receptor | S-score | RMSD | Interacting amino acids |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | KDDGHL | IR | -18.56 | 2.75 | Ser1270, Asp1143, Glu1108, Glu1115, His1057 |
| 2 | EPGGGG | IR | -16.71 | 1.85 | Arg B1026. Glu A186, Asp B1343, His B1057, Lys B1147, Ala B1050, Ser A187 |
| 3 | TSEP | IR | -15.66 | 1.21 | Asp1143, Thr1145, Glu1115, Arg1101, Glu1108 |
| 4 | VAEK | IR | -15.53 | 2.29 | Glu1115, His1058, Ser1270, Asp1143, Phe1144, Glu1108 |
| 5 | LIVA | IR | -14.00 | 1.73 | Thr A178, His B1057, Cys B1056, Val B1059, Glu B1077, Lys B1147 |
| 6 | ESIRD | SGLT1 | -23.81 | 2.86 | Thr431, ser368, Gln428, Asn142, Ser364, Ser66, Lys294, Gln69, Glu88 |
| 7 | DSRHR | SGLT1 | -23.64 | 2.46 | Thr431, Ser368. Gln428. Ser91, Lys294, Ser365, Gln268, Asn267, Asn64, Ser66 |
| 8 | RRKKV | SGLT1 | -20.64 | 2.92 | Thr431, Asn260, Asn267, Tyr263, Asn64, Ser435 |
| 9 | PTRHM | SGLT1 | -19.60 | 1.83 | Tyr263, Gln68, Ala63, Ser365 |
| 10 | DFGAS | SGLT1 | -9.3259 | 1.5980 | Asp189, Tyr176 |
| 11 | PTRHM | DPP-IV | -10.1067 | 2.5395 | Gln268, Thr375, Asn371 |
| 12 | RRKKV | DPP-IV | -9.9189 | 1.7598 | Val185, Asn267, Tyr269 |
| 13 | KDDGHL | DPP-IV | -9.4991 | 1.4528 | Ser368, Asn267, Val185 |
| 14 | RSIHEP | DPP-IV | -9.0877 | 1.7136 | Asn371, Val185 |
| 15 | VAEK | DPP-IV | -8.1677 | 2.3228 | Ser59, Ala63, Ser368 |
| 16 | RRKKV | GLUT2 | -10.5970 | 1.3552 | Met174, Glu361, Arg432 |
| 17 | RSIHEP | GLUT2 | -10.5171 | 2.4307 | Met174, Glu361 |
| 18 | ERFDSG | GLUT2 | -9.6986 | 1.7398 | Gln429, Phe421 |
| 19 | KDDGHL | GLUT2 | -9.5645 | 1.5598 | Glu282 |
| 20 | PTRHM | GLUT2 | -9.2187 | 1.4949 | Arg432 |
Figure 2Docking of ESIRD peptide with SGLT1 receptor. (a) Interactions of peptide with SGLT1. In these interactions, Ser66, Gln69, Ser364, Ser368, Gln428, and Thr431 are polar amino acids and acting as sidechain acceptors. Asn142 is also a polar amino acid but acting as a sidechain donor. Lys294 and Glu88 are basic and acidic amino acids and acting as sidechain donor and acceptor, respectively. (b) Binding pattern of ESIRD with the binding pocket of SGLT1.
Figure 3Docking of LIVA peptide with insulin receptor. (a) Interactions of LIVA with IR. In these interactions, GlnA1004 and SerA1006 are polar amino acids and acting as backbone acceptor and backbone donor, respectively. AsnA1137 is a polar amino acid and acting as a sidechain acceptor. The amino acid AspA1150 is acidic in nature and acting as backbone acceptor while MetA1153 (greasy in nature) is acting as backbone donor. (b) Binding pattern of LIVA with the binding pocket of IR.
Figure 4Docking of DFGAS peptide with SGLT1. (a) Interactions of DFGAS with SGLT1. In these interactions, the amino acids Tyr176 and Asp189 are polar and acidic amino acids and acting as backbone and sidechain acceptors, respectively. (b) Binding pattern of DFGAS with SGLT1.
Figure 5Structural stability evaluation of complexes based on carbon alpha atoms. (a) RMSD, (b) RMSF, and (c) RoG. The residue numbering is adjusted from 1 to the end.
MM-GBSA binding free energy estimation (all the values are described in kcal/mol).
| Energy component | LIVA-Insulin | DFGAS-SGLT1 |
|---|---|---|
| van der Waals | -66.15 | -50.27 |
| Electrostatic | -52.45 | -45.12 |
| Polar solvation | 35.69 | 39.41 |
| Nonpolar solvation | -10.47 | -6.87 |
| Net gas phase | -118.6 | -95.39 |
| Net solvation | 25.22 | 32.54 |
| Net complex energy | -93.38 | -62.85 |
Net MM-GBSA binding free energy decomposition into residues of the receptors. The values are provided in kcal/mol.
| Residue | LIVA-Insulin | Residue | DFGAS-SGLT1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gln1004 | -2.54 | Ala62 | -1.51 |
| Gly1005 | -1..85 | Ala63 | 0.47 |
| Ser1006 | 1.58 | Asn64 | 1.47 |
| Phe1007 | -1.64 | Ile65 | 1.02 |
| Lys1085 | -1.36 | Ser66 | -2.48 |
| Ser1086 | -1.00 | Gly68 | -1.35 |
| Asp1083 | -3.45 | Tyr138 | -1.23 |
| His1130 | 0.25 | Tyr176 | -1.00 |
| Asp1132 | -0.89 | Val185 | -1.85 |
| Arg1136 | -1.65 | Asp189 | -2.58 |
| Asn1137 | 0.05 | Tyr263 | -1.55 |
| Met1139 | 1.63 | Asn267 | -1.27 |
| Asp1150 | -2.54 | Gln268 | -1.20 |
| Phe1151 | -1.02 | Tyr269 | -2.04 |
| Gly1152 | -1.50 | Ile270 | -0.87 |
| Met1153 | -2.54 | Thr274 | 0.68 |
| Ser365 | 0.12 | ||
| Ser364 | -1.08 | ||
| Ala367 | -1.36 | ||
| Met369 | -1.54 | ||
| Asn371 | 1.02 |
Pharmacokinetic parameters important for bioavailability of compound drug-likeness properties of selected peptides.
| Peptides | Target | Molecular properties† | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MW | HBD | HBA | nrotb | Log |
| Violations | ||
| LIVA | IR | 414.54 | 5 | 6 | 12 | 0.51 | 111.74 | 0 |
| TSEP | IR | 432.43 | 7 | 10 | 14 | -3.21 | 103.31 | 1 |
| EKAI | IR | 459.54 | 7 | 7 | 16 | -1.09 | 116.22 | 1 |
| LKHA | IR | 467.57 | 7 | 7 | 15 | -0.99 | 121.46 | 1 |
| EALF | IR | 478.55 | 6 | 6 | 14 | 0.03 | 123.58 | 1 |
| VAEK | IR/DPP-IV | 445.51 | 7 | 7 | 15 | -1.48 | 111.41 | 1 |
| DFGAS | IR/SGLT1/DPP-IV | 495.48 | 8 | 8 | 15 | -3.30 | 118.13 | 1 |
| EPGGGG | IR/SGLT1 | 472.45 | 7 | 10 | 18 | -3.34 | 111.79 | 1 |
| GDVEC | SGLT1 | 521.55 | 9 | 9 | 16 | -3.11 | 121.41 | 2 |
| DDPTG | SGLT1 | 503.47 | 8 | 9 | 17 | -4.19 | 116.53 | 2 |
| PTRHM | DPP-IV/GLUT2 | 640.77 | 11 | 10 | 19 | -2.87 | 165.54 | 3 |
| RRKKV | DPP-IV/GLUT2 | 685.88 | 14 | 10 | 26 | -3.22 | 181.62 | 3 |
| DTDEL | DPP-IV | 591.57 | 10 | 10 | 19 | -3.42 | 135.64 | 3 |
†Molecular properties were calculated using SwissADME, an online tool. MW: molecular weight; HBD: number of hydrogen bond donors; HBA: number of hydrogen bond acceptors; nrotb: number of rotatable bonds; LogP: the logarithm of octanol/water partition coefficient; A: molar refractivity.
Figure 6Structures of best selected peptides: (a) LIVA, (b) TSEP, (c) EKAI, (d) LKHA, (e) EALF, (f) VAEK, (g) DFGAS, and (h) EPGGGG.
ADMET profiling enlisting absorption, metabolism, and toxicity-related drug-like parameters of best selected peptides.
| Peptides | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LIVA | TSEP | EKAI | LKHA | EALF | VAEK | DFGAS | EPGGGG | |
|
| ||||||||
| BBB | + | + | + | + | – | + | + | + |
| HIA | – | – | – | + | + | – | – | + |
| Caco-2 permeability | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- | Caco-2- |
| PGS | Substrate | NS | Substrate | Substrate | Substrate | NS | NS | Substrate |
| PGI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
| ROCT | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
|
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| CYP3A4 substrate | Substrate | NS | Substrate | Substrate | NS | NS | NS | Substrate |
| CYP2C9 substrate | NS | NS | Substrate | NS | NS | NS | NS | Substrate |
| CYP2D6 substrate | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| CYP3A4 inhibition | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
| CYP2C9 inhibition | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
| CYP2C19 inhibition | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
| CYP2D6 inhibition | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
| CYP1A2 inhibition | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI | NI |
|
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| Ames toxicity | NAT | NAT | NAT | NAT | NAT | NAT | NAT | NAT |
| Carcinogens | NC | NC | NC | NC | NC | NC | NC | NC |
BBB: blood-brain barrier; HIA: human intestinal absorption; PGS: P-glycoprotein substrate; PGI: P-glycoprotein inhibitor; ROCT: renal organic cation transporter; NS: nonsubstrate; NI: noninhibitor; NAT: non-Ames toxic; NC: noncarcinogenic.