COMPUTATIONAL STUDIES OF THE NUCLEOCAPSID PROTEIN OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS-1 TO FIND A POTENT INHIBITOR

Authors

  • GOPALUNI SAI AKASH SreeNidhi Institute of Science and Technology

Abstract

Objective: Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites of the host cellular mechanism. Their life cycle is dependent on the host. Human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) is a retrovirus which is considered a threat to humanity and a potential bioweapon. These studies have been conducted to make a potent
inhibitor of this virus, but the rate of success is a very low as the virus is prone to mutations. The objective of this study is to find a potent inhibitor
molecule for the protein nucleocapsid (NC) of HIV.
Methods: Computational studies like docking play a major role in finding the protein-ligand interactions. In this study, the crystal structure of the
protein NC was subjected to high-throughput screening (HTS) against ZINC database to find potential inhibitors of the protein. The selected ligands
were then screened for toxicity using OSIRIS property calculator and Molinspiration. Docking was performed using AutoDock Vina.
Results: HTS analysis provided top 200 hits from the clean fragment subset of ZINC database, out of which best 10 were chosen. These molecules were
then screened for toxicity and violations of Lipinski's rule of 5. A total of five molecules had no toxic effects and best drug scores. These five compounds
were the selected for docking analysis and it was found that the ligand benzene-1, 2-disulfonamide†had the best binding affinity and interacted with
crucial residues of the active site.
Conclusion: From the AutoDock Vina studies, the best pose was obtained with least energy value from which it can be hypothesized that the compound
benzene-1, 2-disulfonamide†can be considered as a potential inhibitor of the protein NC. Furthermore, wet lab studies have to be performed to find
its efficiency and off-target activity.
Keywords: Human immunodeficiency virus-1, Nucleocapsid protein, Psi region, Stem-loop 3, High-throughput screening.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

International Committee for Taxonomy of Viruses. Available from:

http://www.ictvonline.org/virusTaxonomy.asp. [Last accessed on

Mar 07].

Gilbert PB, McKeague IW, Eisen G, Mullins C, Guéye-NDiaye A,

Mboup S, et al. Comparison of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infectivity from a

prospective cohort study in Senegal. Stat Med 2003;22(4):573-93.

Dickson C, Eisenman R, Fan R, Hunter E, Teich N. In: RNA Tumor

Viruses. 2

ed. Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Press; 1984.

nd

Mervis RJ, Ahmad N, Lillehoj EP, Raum MG, Salazar FH, Chan HW,

et al. The gag gene products of human immunodeficiency virus

Type 1: Alignment within the gag open reading frame, identification

of posttranslational modifications, and evidence for alternative gag

precursors. J Virol 1988;62(11):3993-4002.

Berg JM. Potential metal-binding domains in nucleic acid binding

proteins. Science 1986;232(4749):485-7.

Gorelick RJ, Henderson LE, Hanser JP, Rein A. Point mutants of

Moloney murine leukemia virus that fail to package viral RNA:

Evidence for specific RNA recognition by a zinc finger-like†protein

sequence. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1988;85(22):8420-4.

De Guzman RN, Wu ZR, Stalling CC, Pappalardo L, Borer PN,

Summers MF. Structure of the HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein bound to the

SL3 psi-RNA recognition element. Science 1998;279(5349):384-8.

Lever AM, Gottlinger HG, Haseltine WA, Sodroski JG. Identification of

a sequence required for efficient packaging of human immunodeficiency

virus type 1 RNA into virions. J Virol 1989;63:4085-7.

Moore MD, Hu WS. HIV-1 RNA dimerization: It takes two to tango.

AIDS Rev 2009;11:91-102.

Berman HM. The Protein Data Bank: A historical perspective. Acta

Crystallogr A 2008;64:88-95.

Dundas J, Ouyang Z, Tseng J, Binkowski A, Turpaz Y, Liang J. CASTp:

Computed atlas of surface topography of proteins with structural and

topographical mapping of functionally annotated residues. Nucleic

Acids Res 2006;34:W116-8.

Irwin JJ, Shoichet BK, Mysinger MM, Huang N, Colizzi F, Wassam P,

et al. Automated docking screens: A feasibility study. J Med Chem

;52(18):5712-20.

OSIRIS Property Explorer. Available from: http://www.

openmolecules.org/propertyexplorer/index.html. [Last accessed on

Mar 07].

Molinspiration Property Calculation Services. Available from: http://

www.molinspiration.com/cgi-bin/properties. [Last accessed on 2016

Mar 07].

Trott O, Olson AJ. AutoDock Vina: Improving the speed and accuracy

of docking with a new scoring function, efficient optimization, and

multithreading. J Comput Chem 2010;31(2):455-61.

Ref. Dassault Systèmes BIOVIA, Discovery Studio Modeling

Environment, Release 4.5. San Diego: Dassault Systèmes; 2015.

Published

01-05-2016

How to Cite

AKASH, G. S. . “COMPUTATIONAL STUDIES OF THE NUCLEOCAPSID PROTEIN OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS-1 TO FIND A POTENT INHIBITOR”. Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical and Clinical Research, vol. 9, no. 3, May 2016, pp. 367-70, https://journals.innovareacademics.in/index.php/ajpcr/article/view/11574.

Issue

Section

Original Article(s)