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Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach

Streptomyces is amongst the most amenable genera for biotechnological applications, and it is extensively used as a scaffold for drug development. One of the most effective therapeutic applications in the treatment of cancer is targeted therapy. Small molecule therapy is one of them, and it has gott...

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Autores principales: Jemmy Christy, H., Vasudevan, Swetha, Sudha, S., Kandeel, Mahmoud, Subramanian, Kumaran, Pugazhvendan, S. R., Ronald Ross, P., Velmurugan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9293527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35860806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/6600403
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author Jemmy Christy, H.
Vasudevan, Swetha
Sudha, S.
Kandeel, Mahmoud
Subramanian, Kumaran
Pugazhvendan, S. R.
Ronald Ross, P.
Velmurugan,
author_facet Jemmy Christy, H.
Vasudevan, Swetha
Sudha, S.
Kandeel, Mahmoud
Subramanian, Kumaran
Pugazhvendan, S. R.
Ronald Ross, P.
Velmurugan,
author_sort Jemmy Christy, H.
collection PubMed
description Streptomyces is amongst the most amenable genera for biotechnological applications, and it is extensively used as a scaffold for drug development. One of the most effective therapeutic applications in the treatment of cancer is targeted therapy. Small molecule therapy is one of them, and it has gotten a lot of attention recently. Streptomyces derived compounds namely streptenols A, C, and F–I and streptazolin were subjected for ADMET property assessment. Our computational studies based on molecular docking effectively displayed the synergistic effect of streptomyces-derived compounds on the gynecological cancer target PIK3CA. These compounds were observed with the highest docking scores as well as promising intermolecular interaction stability throughout the molecular dynamic simulation. Molecular docking and molecular dynamic modeling techniques were utilized to investigate the binding mode stability of drugs using a pharmacophore scaffold, as well as physicochemical and pharmacokinetic aspects linked to alpelisib. With a root mean square fluctuation of the protein backbone of less than 0.7 nm, they demonstrated a steady binding mode in the target binding pocket. They have also prompted hydrogen bonding throughout the simulations, implying that the chemicals have firmly occupied the active site. A comprehensive study showed that streptenol D, streptenol E, streptenol C, streptenol G, streptenol F, and streptenol B can be considered as lead compounds for PIK3CA-based inhibitor design. To warrant the treatment efficacy against cancer, comprehensive computational research based on proposed chemicals must be assessed through in vitro studies.
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spelling pubmed-92935272022-07-19 Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach Jemmy Christy, H. Vasudevan, Swetha Sudha, S. Kandeel, Mahmoud Subramanian, Kumaran Pugazhvendan, S. R. Ronald Ross, P. Velmurugan, Biomed Res Int Research Article Streptomyces is amongst the most amenable genera for biotechnological applications, and it is extensively used as a scaffold for drug development. One of the most effective therapeutic applications in the treatment of cancer is targeted therapy. Small molecule therapy is one of them, and it has gotten a lot of attention recently. Streptomyces derived compounds namely streptenols A, C, and F–I and streptazolin were subjected for ADMET property assessment. Our computational studies based on molecular docking effectively displayed the synergistic effect of streptomyces-derived compounds on the gynecological cancer target PIK3CA. These compounds were observed with the highest docking scores as well as promising intermolecular interaction stability throughout the molecular dynamic simulation. Molecular docking and molecular dynamic modeling techniques were utilized to investigate the binding mode stability of drugs using a pharmacophore scaffold, as well as physicochemical and pharmacokinetic aspects linked to alpelisib. With a root mean square fluctuation of the protein backbone of less than 0.7 nm, they demonstrated a steady binding mode in the target binding pocket. They have also prompted hydrogen bonding throughout the simulations, implying that the chemicals have firmly occupied the active site. A comprehensive study showed that streptenol D, streptenol E, streptenol C, streptenol G, streptenol F, and streptenol B can be considered as lead compounds for PIK3CA-based inhibitor design. To warrant the treatment efficacy against cancer, comprehensive computational research based on proposed chemicals must be assessed through in vitro studies. Hindawi 2022-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9293527/ /pubmed/35860806 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/6600403 Text en Copyright © 2022 H. Jemmy Christy et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jemmy Christy, H.
Vasudevan, Swetha
Sudha, S.
Kandeel, Mahmoud
Subramanian, Kumaran
Pugazhvendan, S. R.
Ronald Ross, P.
Velmurugan,
Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title_full Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title_fullStr Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title_full_unstemmed Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title_short Targeting Streptomyces-Derived Streptenol Derivatives against Gynecological Cancer Target PIK3CA: An In Silico Approach
title_sort targeting streptomyces-derived streptenol derivatives against gynecological cancer target pik3ca: an in silico approach
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9293527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35860806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/6600403
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