Abstract

Efforts to combat Alzheimer’s disease are focused predominantly on inhibiting the activity of the enzyme(s) that have been identified to be responsible for the production of the amyloid-forming peptide. However, the inherent complexity associated with the network of pathways leading to the disease may involve additional targets for designing effective therapies. Recent experimental findings have identified abelson tyrosine kinase, a non-receptor kinase as a new target for Alzheimer’s. In this work, we employed energy optimized multiple pharmacophore modeling strategy from multiple c-Abl structures bound with ligands in the inactive ATP binding conformation (DFG-out). Virtual screening followed by docking of molecules from ChemBridge resulted in the identification of 10 best scoring molecules. MD simulations of the top three complexes revealed that Compound A, C are the most stable complexes with the most persistent protein–ligand interactions consistent with the calculated binding affinities for the top three compounds. Given the implied role of c-Abl not only in AD but in Parkinson’s disease, the identified compounds may serve as leads for effective neurotherapeutics.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call