A Bioinformatics Study of Structural Perturbation of 3CL-Protease and the HR2-Domain of SARS-CoV-2 Induced by Synergistic Interaction with Ivermectins
Autor: | Carla A. Lossada, Aleivi E. Pérez, Edgar Portillo, Lenin A. González-Paz, José Luis Paz, Joan Vera-Villalobos, Luis S. Moncayo, Freddy Romero, Ysaias J. Alvarado, Ernesto San-Blas |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Drug
Protease Antiparasitic medicine.drug_class Chemistry media_common.quotation_subject medicine.medical_treatment Biochemistry In vitro Molecular dynamics Mechanism of action Docking (molecular) parasitic diseases medicine Biophysics Native state Molecular Medicine medicine.symptom Molecular Biology Biotechnology media_common |
Zdroj: | Biointerface Research in Applied Chemistry. 11:9813-9826 |
ISSN: | 2069-5837 |
Popis: | The pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 forces drug research to combat it. Ivermectin, an FDA approved antiparasitic drug formulated as a mixture 80:20 of the equipotent homologous 22,23 dihydro ivermectin (B1_a and B1_b), which is known to inhibit SARS-CoV-2 in vitro with a mechanism of action to be defined. It draws attention powerfully that the energetic and structural perturbation that this drug induces by binding on SARS-COV-2 proteins of importance for its proliferation is ill unknown. Hence what we do an exhaustive computational biophysics study to discriminate the best docking of ivermectins to viral proteins and, subsequently, to analyze possible structural alterations with molecular dynamics. The results suggested that ivermectins are capable of docking to the superficial and internal pocket of the 3CL-protease and the HR2-domain, inducing unfolding/folding that change the native conformation in these proteins. In particular, ivermectin binds to the 3CL protease and leads this protein to an unfolded state, whereas the HR2-domain to a more compact conformation in comparison to the native state by refolding when the drug binding to this protein. The results obtained suggest a possible synergistic inhibitory against SARS-COV-2 owing to each role of ivermectins when favorably binding to these viral proteins. Given the importance of the results obtained about this new mechanism of action of ivermectin on SARS-CoV-2, experimental studies are needed that corroborate this proposal. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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