Pharmacophore mapping,molecular docking and QSAR studies of structurally diverse compounds as CYP2B6 inhibitors |
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Authors: | Partha Pratim Roy |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Division of Medicinal and Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Drug Theoretics and Cheminformatics Laboratory , Jadavpur University , Kolkata, 700 032, India |
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Abstract: | Pharmacophore mapping, molecular docking and quantitative structure–activity relationship (QSAR) studies were carried out for a structurally diverse set of 48 compounds as CYP2B6 inhibitors. The generated best pharmacophore hypotheses from the three methods of conformer generation (FAST, BEST and conformer algorithm based on energy screening and recursive buildup) indicate the importance of two features, namely, hydrogen bond acceptor [electron-rich centre] and ring aromaticity. The distance between the two centres of the important features for ideal inhibitors varied from 5.82 to 6.03 Å. The chemometric tools used for the QSAR analysis were genetic function approximation (GFA) and genetic partial least squares. The developed QSAR models indicate the importance of an electron-rich centre, size of molecule, impact of branching and ring system and distribution of charges in the molecular surface. The docking study confirms the importance of an electron-rich centre for binding with the iron atom of the cytochrome enzyme. A GFA model with spline option was found to be the best model based on internal validation as well as the r 2 m (overall) criterion (Q 2 = 0.772, r 2 m (overall) = 0.774). According to the external prediction statistics (R 2 pred = 0.876), another GFA-derived model with spline option outperforms the remaining models. |
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Keywords: | QSAR pharmacophore cytochrome 2B6 GFA G/PLS |
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