Abstract

Amyloid [Formula: see text] (A[Formula: see text]) peptide monomers polymerize to form insoluble amyloid fibril aggregates and accumulate as senile plaques which eventually leads to cognitive impairment. Modulating abnormal amyloid aggregation can be considered a therapeutic target for Alzheimer’s disease. Recent studies support that Curcumin interferes with larger protein aggregate formation by destabilizing the salt bridge (Asp 23-Lys 28) of A[Formula: see text] protein. The chemical library of curcumin derivative with pyrazole, isoxazole, and isothiazole showed considerable binding affinity comparable to that of curcumin. In silico docking studies of the library of the compound, revealed strong binding affinity with A[Formula: see text] protein and [Formula: see text]-secretase enzyme (BACE1). De novo ligand design coupled with manual pharmacophore mapping of our best-fitting lead revealed another ligand having a potential binding affinity with both A[Formula: see text] protein and BACE-1. Both the compounds passed Lipinski’s Rule of Five, in silico toxicity testing by admetSAR, and pharmacophore overlaps with Verubecestat, a compound under clinical trial against Alzheimer’s disease. MD dynamic simulation study revealed the stability of protein after it binds to our ligand. Secondary structure determination was also done to observe the changes in [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] sheets of the protein with and without ligand binding. Ligand-based drug design was also carried out via pharmacophore mapping and searching the molecules via zinc database.

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