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Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs

Computer-aided drug design provides broad structural modifications to evolving bioactive molecules without an immediate requirement to observe synthetic restraints or tedious protocols. Subsequently, the most promising guidelines with regard to synthetic and biological resources may be focused on up...

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Autores principales: Alikhani, Radin, Ebadi, Ahmad, Karami, Pari, Shahbipour, Sara, Razzaghi-Asl, Nima
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8653677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34904009
http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ijpr.2020.113644.14409
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author Alikhani, Radin
Ebadi, Ahmad
Karami, Pari
Shahbipour, Sara
Razzaghi-Asl, Nima
author_facet Alikhani, Radin
Ebadi, Ahmad
Karami, Pari
Shahbipour, Sara
Razzaghi-Asl, Nima
author_sort Alikhani, Radin
collection PubMed
description Computer-aided drug design provides broad structural modifications to evolving bioactive molecules without an immediate requirement to observe synthetic restraints or tedious protocols. Subsequently, the most promising guidelines with regard to synthetic and biological resources may be focused on upcoming steps. Molecular docking is common in-silico drug design techniques since it predicts ligand-receptor interaction modes and associated binding affinities. Current docking simulations suffer serious constraints in estimating accurate ligand-receptor binding affinities despite several advantages and historical results. Response surface method (RSM) is an efficient statistical approach for modeling and optimization of various pharmaceutical systems. With the aim of unveiling the full potential of RSM in optimizing molecular docking simulations, this study particularly focused on binding affinity prediction of citalopram-serotonin transporter (SERT) and donepezil-acetyl cholinesterase (AChE) complexes. For this purpose, Box-Behnken design of experiments (DOE) was used to develop a trial matrix for simultaneous variations of AutoDock4.2 driven binding affinity data with selected factor levels. Responses of all docking trials were considered as estimated protein inhibition constants with regard to validated data for each drug. The output matrix was subjected to statistical analysis and constructing polynomial quadratic models. Numerical optimization steps to attain ideal docking accuracies revealed that more accurate results might be envisaged through the best combination of factor levels and considering factor interactions. Results of the current study indicated that the application of RSM in molecular docking simulations might lead to optimized docking protocols with more stable estimates of ligand-target interactions and hence better correlation of in-silico in-vitro data.
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spelling pubmed-86536772021-12-12 Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs Alikhani, Radin Ebadi, Ahmad Karami, Pari Shahbipour, Sara Razzaghi-Asl, Nima Iran J Pharm Res Original Article Computer-aided drug design provides broad structural modifications to evolving bioactive molecules without an immediate requirement to observe synthetic restraints or tedious protocols. Subsequently, the most promising guidelines with regard to synthetic and biological resources may be focused on upcoming steps. Molecular docking is common in-silico drug design techniques since it predicts ligand-receptor interaction modes and associated binding affinities. Current docking simulations suffer serious constraints in estimating accurate ligand-receptor binding affinities despite several advantages and historical results. Response surface method (RSM) is an efficient statistical approach for modeling and optimization of various pharmaceutical systems. With the aim of unveiling the full potential of RSM in optimizing molecular docking simulations, this study particularly focused on binding affinity prediction of citalopram-serotonin transporter (SERT) and donepezil-acetyl cholinesterase (AChE) complexes. For this purpose, Box-Behnken design of experiments (DOE) was used to develop a trial matrix for simultaneous variations of AutoDock4.2 driven binding affinity data with selected factor levels. Responses of all docking trials were considered as estimated protein inhibition constants with regard to validated data for each drug. The output matrix was subjected to statistical analysis and constructing polynomial quadratic models. Numerical optimization steps to attain ideal docking accuracies revealed that more accurate results might be envisaged through the best combination of factor levels and considering factor interactions. Results of the current study indicated that the application of RSM in molecular docking simulations might lead to optimized docking protocols with more stable estimates of ligand-target interactions and hence better correlation of in-silico in-vitro data. Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8653677/ /pubmed/34904009 http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ijpr.2020.113644.14409 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) ) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Alikhani, Radin
Ebadi, Ahmad
Karami, Pari
Shahbipour, Sara
Razzaghi-Asl, Nima
Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title_full Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title_fullStr Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title_full_unstemmed Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title_short Response Surface Study on Molecular Docking Simulations of Citalopram and Donepezil as Potent CNS Drugs
title_sort response surface study on molecular docking simulations of citalopram and donepezil as potent cns drugs
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8653677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34904009
http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ijpr.2020.113644.14409
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