Abstract

Blood coagulation is an essential physiological process for hemostasis; however, abnormal coagulation can lead to various potentially fatal disorders, generally known as thromboembolic disorders, which are a major cause of mortality in the modern world. Recently, the FDA has approved several anticoagulant drugs for Factor Xa (FXa) which work via the common pathway of the coagulation cascade. A main side effect of these drugs is the potential risk for bleeding in patients. Coagulation Factor IXa (FIXa) has recently emerged as the strategic target to ease these risks as it selectively regulates the intrinsic pathway. These aforementioned coagulation factors are highly similar in structure, functional architecture, and inhibitor binding mode. Therefore, it remains a challenge to design a selective inhibitor which may affect only FIXa. With the availability of a number of X-ray co-crystal structures of these two coagulation factors as protein–ligand complexes, structural alignment, molecular docking, and pharmacophore modeling were employed to derive the relevant criteria for selective inhibition of FIXa over FXa. In this study, six ligands (three potent, two selective, and one inactive) were selected for FIXa inhibition and six potent ligands (four FDA approved drugs) were considered for FXa. The pharmacophore hypotheses provide the distribution patterns for the principal interactions that take place in the binding site. None of the pharmacophoric patterns of the FXa inhibitors matched with any of the patterns of FIXa inhibitors. Based on pharmacophore analysis, a selectivity of a ligand for FIXa over FXa may be defined quantitatively as a docking score of lower than −8.0 kcal/mol in the FIXa-grids and higher than −7.5 kcal/mol in the FXa-grids.

Highlights

  • While blood coagulation is an essential physiological process for hemostasis, abnormal blood coagulation has fatal impacts that lead to a number of coagulation-associated disorders

  • Factor IXa (FIXa) bound with 6 different ligands and 6 are from Factor Xa (FXa) bound with 6 different ligands

  • Through the structural analysis and sequence analysis, the binding site deformations were shown to be very small. These small structural changes could not shed much light on the selectivity, rather it describes the objective of this work and provides motivation for further investigation toward cross docking and pharmacophore modeling

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Summary

Introduction

While blood coagulation is an essential physiological process for hemostasis, abnormal blood coagulation has fatal impacts that lead to a number of coagulation-associated disorders. Arterial fibrillation causes clot formation which gives rise to a number of clinical (pathological) conditions, e.g., arterial and venous thrombosis, heart attack, ischemic stroke, pulmonary embolism, or cardiogenic stroke. All these conditions are, in general, categorized as thromboembolic disorders which continues to be one of the major causes of mortality and disability in the modern world. Anticoagulants are the established treatments to manage thromboembolic disorders [1,2,3]. Heparin and warfarin are the earliest therapies as anticoagulants for thromboembolic disorders, but these agents regulate the coagulation process through the indirect pathway and have restricted use due to their bleeding risk [4].

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