Publication | Closed Access
Flavonoids as potent allosteric inhibitors of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B: molecular dynamics simulation and free energy calculation
28
Citations
54
References
2017
Year
Molecular BiologyMolecular Dynamics SimulationPotent Allosteric InhibitorsChemical BiologyInsulin SignalingMedicinal ChemistryAllosteric SiteStructure-function Enzyme KineticsInhibitory ActivityBiochemistryMedicineBiochemical InteractionFree Energy CalculationBiomolecular InteractionPtp SuperfamilyPharmacologyNatural SciencesRational Drug DesignMolecular DockingRepresentative Enzyme SubstratesDrug Discovery
Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) is a member of the PTP superfamily which is considered to be a negative regulator of insulin receptor (IR) signaling pathway. PTP1B is a promising drug target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, obesity, and cancer. The existence of allosteric site in PTP1B has turned the researcher's attention to an alternate strategy for inhibition of this enzyme. Herein, the molecular interactions between the allosteric site of PTP1B with three non-competitive flavonoids, (MOR), (MOK), and (DPO) have been investigated. Three ligands were docked into allosteric site of the enzyme. The resulting protein-ligand complexes were used for molecular dynamics studies. Principal component and free-energy landscape (FEL) as well as cluster analyses were used to investigate the conformational and dynamical properties of the protein and identify representative enzyme substrates bounded to the inhibitors. Per residue energy decomposition analysis attributed dissimilar affinities of three inhibitors to the several hydrogen bonds and non-bonded interactions. In conclusion, our results exhibited an inhibitory pattern of the ligands against PTP1B.
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