Faculty Publications
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Item Effect of hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions on the potency of ß-alanine analogs of G-protein coupled glucagon receptor inhibitors(John Wiley and Sons Inc. P.O.Box 18667 Newark NJ 07191-8667, 2020) Venugopal, P.P.; Das, B.K.; Soorya, E.; Chakraborty, D.G-protein coupled glucagon receptors (GCGRs) play an important role in glucose homeostasis and pathophysiology of Type-II Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM). The allosteric pocket located at the trans-membrane domain of GCGR consists of hydrophobic (TM5) and hydrophilic (TM7) units. Hydrophobic interactions with the amino acid residues present at TM5, found to facilitate the favorable orientation of antagonist at GCGR allosteric pocket. A statistically robust and highly predictive 3D-QSAR model was developed using 58 ?-alanine based GCGR antagonists with significant variation in structure and potency profile. The correlation coefficient (R2) and cross-validation coefficient (Q2) of the developed model were found to be 0.9981 and 0.8253, respectively at the PLS factor of 8. The analysis of the favorable and unfavorable contribution of different structural features on the glucagon receptor antagonists was done by 3D-QSAR contour plots. Hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions are found to be main dominating non-bonding interactions in docking studies. Presence of highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) in the polar part and lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) in the hydrophobic part of antagonists leads to favorable protein-ligand interactions. Molecular mechanics/generalized born surface area (MM/GBSA) calculations showed that van der Waals and nonpolar solvation energy terms are crucial components for thermodynamically stable binding of the inhibitors. The binding free energy of highly potent compound was found to be ?63.475 kcal/mol; whereas the least active compound exhibited binding energy of ?41.097 kcal/mol. Further, five 100 ns molecular dynamics simulation (MD) simulations were done to confirm the stability of the inhibitor-receptor complex. Outcomes of the present study can serve as the basis for designing improved GCGR antagonists. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Item Deciphering the competitive inhibition of dihydropteroate synthase by 8 marcaptoguanine analogs: enhanced potency in phenylsulfonyl fragments(Taylor and Francis Ltd., 2022) Das, B.K.; Chakraborty, D.The emergence of sulfa-drug resistance and reduced efficacy of pterin-based analogs towards Dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) inhibition dictate a pressing need of developing novel antimicrobial agents for immune-compromised patients. Recently, a series of 8-Marcaptoguanin (8-MG) derivatives synthesized for 6-Hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin pyrophosphokinase (experimental KD ∼ 100–.0.36) showed remarkable homology with the pteroic-acid and serve as a template for product antagonism in DHPS. The present work integrates ligand-based drug discovery techniques with structure-based docking, enhanced MD simulation, and MM/PBSA techniques to demonstrate the essential features of 8-MG analogs which make it a potent inhibitor for DHPS. The delicate balance in hydrophilic, hydrophobic substitutions on the 8-MG core is the crucial signature for DHPS inhibition. It is found that the dynamic interactions of active compounds are mainly dominated by consistent hydrogen bonding network with Asp 96, Asn 115, Asp 185, Ser 222, Arg 255 and π-π stacking, π-cation interactions with Phe 190, Lys 221. Further, two new 8-MG compounds containing N-phenylacetamide (compound S1, ΔGbind-eff = –62.03 kJ/mol) and phenylsulfonyl (compound S3, ΔGbind-eff = −71.29 kJ/mol) fragments were found to be the most potent inhibitor of DHPS, which stabilize the flexible pABA binding loop, thereby increasing their binding affinity. MM/PBSA calculation shows electrostatic energy contribution to be the principal component in stabilizing the inhibitors in the binding pocket. This fact is further confirmed by the higher energy barrier obtained in umbrella sampling for this class of inhibitors. © 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
