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Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study

1. Modelling of CTX­M enzyme from bla(CTX­M) sequences of clinical Escherichia coli isolates. 2. Docking of cefotaxime with modelled CTX­M enzymes to identify amino acid residues crucial to their interaction . 3. To hypothesize a possible relationship between ’interaction energy of the docked enzyme...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shakil, Shazi, Khan, Asad Ullah
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2951708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20975911
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author Shakil, Shazi
Khan, Asad Ullah
author_facet Shakil, Shazi
Khan, Asad Ullah
author_sort Shakil, Shazi
collection PubMed
description 1. Modelling of CTX­M enzyme from bla(CTX­M) sequences of clinical Escherichia coli isolates. 2. Docking of cefotaxime with modelled CTX­M enzymes to identify amino acid residues crucial to their interaction . 3. To hypothesize a possible relationship between ’interaction energy of the docked enzyme­antibiotic complex‘ and ’minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic against the bacteria producing that enzyme‘. Seven E. coli strains of clinical origin which were confirmed as PCR­positive for bla(CTX­M) were selected for the study. C600 cells harboring cloned bla(CTX­M) were tested for ESBL­production by double­disk­synergy test. BLAST analysis confirmed all the bla(CTX-M) genes as blaCTX­M­15. Four of the 7 strains were found to be clonally related. Modelling was performed using Swiss Model Server. Discovery Studio 2.0 (Accelrys) was used to prepare Ramachandran plots for the modelled structures. Ramachandran Z­scores for modelled CTX­M enzymes from E. coli strains D8, D183, D253, D281, D282, D295 and D296 were found to be ­0.449, 0.096, 0.027, 0.043, 0.032, ­1.249 and ­1.107, respectively. Docking was performed using Hex 5.1 and the results were further confirmed by Autodock 4.0. The amino acid residues Asn 104, Asn132, Gly 227, Thr 235, Gly 236, and Ser237 were found to be responsible for positioning cefotaxime into the active site of the CTX­M­15 enzyme. It was found that cefotaxime MICs for the CTX­M­15­producers increased with the increasing negative interaction energy of the enzyme­antibiotic complex.
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spelling pubmed-29517082010-10-25 Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study Shakil, Shazi Khan, Asad Ullah Bioinformation Hypothesis 1. Modelling of CTX­M enzyme from bla(CTX­M) sequences of clinical Escherichia coli isolates. 2. Docking of cefotaxime with modelled CTX­M enzymes to identify amino acid residues crucial to their interaction . 3. To hypothesize a possible relationship between ’interaction energy of the docked enzyme­antibiotic complex‘ and ’minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic against the bacteria producing that enzyme‘. Seven E. coli strains of clinical origin which were confirmed as PCR­positive for bla(CTX­M) were selected for the study. C600 cells harboring cloned bla(CTX­M) were tested for ESBL­production by double­disk­synergy test. BLAST analysis confirmed all the bla(CTX-M) genes as blaCTX­M­15. Four of the 7 strains were found to be clonally related. Modelling was performed using Swiss Model Server. Discovery Studio 2.0 (Accelrys) was used to prepare Ramachandran plots for the modelled structures. Ramachandran Z­scores for modelled CTX­M enzymes from E. coli strains D8, D183, D253, D281, D282, D295 and D296 were found to be ­0.449, 0.096, 0.027, 0.043, 0.032, ­1.249 and ­1.107, respectively. Docking was performed using Hex 5.1 and the results were further confirmed by Autodock 4.0. The amino acid residues Asn 104, Asn132, Gly 227, Thr 235, Gly 236, and Ser237 were found to be responsible for positioning cefotaxime into the active site of the CTX­M­15 enzyme. It was found that cefotaxime MICs for the CTX­M­15­producers increased with the increasing negative interaction energy of the enzyme­antibiotic complex. Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2951708/ /pubmed/20975911 Text en © 2010 Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Shakil, Shazi
Khan, Asad Ullah
Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title_full Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title_fullStr Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title_full_unstemmed Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title_short Interaction of CTX­M­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
title_sort interaction of ctx­m­15 enzyme with cefotaxime: a molecular modelling and docking study
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2951708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20975911
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