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Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach

A combination of molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation (250 ns) has been carried out to study the interaction of stilbenoid trimer compounds with the SIRT1 enzyme as the target protein. SIRT1 expression regulates cellular stress responses that lead to the development of cancer. Redocki...

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Autores principales: Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas, Aminah, Nanik Siti, Siswanto, Imam, Kristanti, Alfinda Novi, Takaya, Yoshiaki, Choudhary, Muhammad Iqbal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9033617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35478645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra02233d
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author Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas
Aminah, Nanik Siti
Siswanto, Imam
Kristanti, Alfinda Novi
Takaya, Yoshiaki
Choudhary, Muhammad Iqbal
author_facet Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas
Aminah, Nanik Siti
Siswanto, Imam
Kristanti, Alfinda Novi
Takaya, Yoshiaki
Choudhary, Muhammad Iqbal
author_sort Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas
collection PubMed
description A combination of molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation (250 ns) has been carried out to study the interaction of stilbenoid trimer compounds with the SIRT1 enzyme as the target protein. SIRT1 expression regulates cellular stress responses that lead to the development of cancer. Redocking showed a good native ligand pose with an RMSD value of 1.40 Å at the receptor active site's coordinates. The molecular docking score uses a grid score functional (kcal mol(−1)), which shows results of 1NS: 79.56, TS1: −26.83, TS2: −87.77, and TS3: −83.67. The TS2 and TS3 candidates were chosen for further analysis because they had a lower grid score than the native ligand (1NS). Furthermore, prediction of binding free energy (kcal mol(−1)) using the Quantum Mechanics/generalized Born Surface Area (QM/MM-GBSA) method shows the results of 1NS: −31.52 ± 0.39, TS2: −58.99 ± 0.34, and TS3: −43.38 ± 0.35. These results indicate that the TS2 and TS3 compounds have good potential as inhibitors of the SIRT1 enzyme. Additionally, the amino acid residues were responsible for the inhibition mechanism through hydrogen bond interactions at the molecular level, including ASP22, PHE91, PRO11, ILE165, ASP166, and VAL230. The observations made in this study provide theoretical information for exploring the stilbenoid trimers as anticancer agents by targeting the SIRT1 enzyme.
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spelling pubmed-90336172022-04-26 Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas Aminah, Nanik Siti Siswanto, Imam Kristanti, Alfinda Novi Takaya, Yoshiaki Choudhary, Muhammad Iqbal RSC Adv Chemistry A combination of molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation (250 ns) has been carried out to study the interaction of stilbenoid trimer compounds with the SIRT1 enzyme as the target protein. SIRT1 expression regulates cellular stress responses that lead to the development of cancer. Redocking showed a good native ligand pose with an RMSD value of 1.40 Å at the receptor active site's coordinates. The molecular docking score uses a grid score functional (kcal mol(−1)), which shows results of 1NS: 79.56, TS1: −26.83, TS2: −87.77, and TS3: −83.67. The TS2 and TS3 candidates were chosen for further analysis because they had a lower grid score than the native ligand (1NS). Furthermore, prediction of binding free energy (kcal mol(−1)) using the Quantum Mechanics/generalized Born Surface Area (QM/MM-GBSA) method shows the results of 1NS: −31.52 ± 0.39, TS2: −58.99 ± 0.34, and TS3: −43.38 ± 0.35. These results indicate that the TS2 and TS3 compounds have good potential as inhibitors of the SIRT1 enzyme. Additionally, the amino acid residues were responsible for the inhibition mechanism through hydrogen bond interactions at the molecular level, including ASP22, PHE91, PRO11, ILE165, ASP166, and VAL230. The observations made in this study provide theoretical information for exploring the stilbenoid trimers as anticancer agents by targeting the SIRT1 enzyme. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9033617/ /pubmed/35478645 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra02233d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Abdjan, Muhammad Ikhlas
Aminah, Nanik Siti
Siswanto, Imam
Kristanti, Alfinda Novi
Takaya, Yoshiaki
Choudhary, Muhammad Iqbal
Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title_full Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title_fullStr Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title_full_unstemmed Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title_short Exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
title_sort exploration of stilbenoid trimers as potential inhibitors of sirtuin1 enzyme using a molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9033617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35478645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra02233d
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