Structure-Based Design of Potential anti-Dengue Compounds against the Envelope Glycoprotein of Dengue 2 Virus
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J. Comput. Biophys. Chem
Abstract
The spread of dengue fever has resulted in several deaths for which no drug is currently efficacious. A
potential target for the development of an antiviral drug that prevents conformational changes and interferes with mem brane fusion is the Dengue β-OG binding pocket. This study aimed to identify potential natural product leads with the
propensity to inhibit the envelope protein. Three known inhibitors (DV2419-447, NITD449 and Doxycycline) and
43,465 compounds compiled from naturally derived product libraries comprising AfroDb, NANPDB and TCMID were
screened against the envelope protein’s energy-minimized structure as an integrated library. After the molecular docking
studies involving 7200 prefiltered compounds and three known inhibitors using AutoDock Vina, 620 top-identified hits
were physiochemically and pharmacologically profiled using SwissADME. Compared with reported potent inhibitors,
the lead compounds were shown to have better binding affinities greater than −8.6kcal/mol. Four predicted lead com pounds comprising ZINC000014721518, ZINC000005195832, ZINC000014819293 and ZINC000004102396 were iden tified to interact with Thr48, Leu198 and Gln49, which are critical residues in the inhibition of membrane fusion. All the
potential leads were predicted to be antiviral and membrane permeability inhibitors with Pa>0.300 and Pa>0.500,
respectively. ZINC000014756860, ZINC000014819293 and ZINC000003871358 were predicted to be viral entry inhibi tors. Structurally similar compounds have been shown to inhibit Dengue virus (DENV) replication. In-depth molecular
dynamics simulations, including MM/PBSA computations, further substantiated the protein–ligand complexes’ stability
and favorable binding mechanisms with residues Leu198, Ile270, Thr48 and Phe193. Further experimental evaluation is
needed to understand their role in inhibiting DENV viral entry
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Research Article
