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Mechanistic elucidation of amphetamine metabolism by tyramine oxidase from human gut microbiota using molecular dynamics simulations
Authors:Kundan Kumar  Gaurao V Dhoke  Ashok K Sharma  Shubham K Jaiswal  Vineet K Sharma
Institution:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Metagenomics and Systems Biology Laboratory, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal, Bhopal, India

Kumar, Dhoke, and Sharma 2. have contributed equally.;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Metagenomics and Systems Biology Laboratory, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal, Bhopal, India

Present address: Gaurao V. Dhoke, RWTH Aachen University, Chair of Biotechnology, Worringer Weg 3, D-52074 Aachen, Germany. Ashok K. Sharma, Microbiomics Laboratory, Department of Animal Science, University of Minnesota, 305 Haecker Hall, 1364 Eckles Avenue, St Paul, MN 55108-6118.

Kumar, Dhoke, and Sharma 4. Department of Biological Sciences, Metagenomics and Systems Biology Laboratory, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal, Bhopal, India

Abstract:The human gut harbors diverse bacterial species in the gut, which play an important role in the metabolism of food and host health. Recent studies have also revealed their role in altering the pharmacological properties and efficacy of oral drugs through promiscuous metabolism. However, the atomistic details of the enzyme-drug interactions of gut bacterial enzymes which can potentially carry out the metabolism of drug molecules are still scarce. A well-known example is the FDA drug amphetamine (a central nervous system stimulant), which has been predicted to undergo promiscuous metabolism by gut bacteria. Therefore, to understand the atomistic details and energy landscape of the gut microbial enzyme-mediated metabolism of this drug, molecular dynamics studies were performed. It was observed that amphetamine binds to tyramine oxidase from the Escherichia coli strain present in the human gut microbiota at the binding site harboring polar and nonpolar amino acids. The stability analysis of amphetamine at the binding site showed that the binding is stable and the free energy for the binding of amphetamine was found to be ~ −51.71 kJ/mol. The insights provided by this study on promiscuous metabolism of amphetamine by a gut enzyme will be very useful to improve the efficacy of the drug.
Keywords:amphetamine  free energy for the binding  gut microbiota  molecular dynamics simulation
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