Abstract

Context: Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPARγ) is a member of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily of ligand-activated transcription factors. Activation of PPARγ pathway has been shown to enhance fatty acid oxidation, improve endothelial cell function, and decrease myocardial fibrosis in heart failure. Thus, the protein has been raised as an attractive target for heart failure therapy. Objective: This work attempted to discover new and potent PPARγ agonists from natural products using a synthetic strategy of computer virtual screening and transactivation reporter assay. Materials and methods: A large library of structurally diverse, drug-like natural products was compiled, from which those with unsatisfactory pharmacokinetic profile and/or structurally redundant compounds were excluded. The binding mode of remaining candidates to PPARγ ligand-binding domain (LBD) was computationally modelled using molecular docking and their relative binding potency was ranked by an empirical scoring scheme. Consequently, eight commercially available hits with top scores were selected and their biological activity was determined using a cell-based reporter-gene assay. Results: Four natural product compounds, namely ZINC13408172, ZINC4292805, ZINC44179 and ZINC901461, were identified to have high or moderate agonistic potency against human PPARγ with EC50 values of 0.084, 2.1, 0.35 and 5.6 μM, respectively, which are comparable to or even better than that of the approved PPARγ full agonists pioglitazone (EC50 = 0.16 μM) and rosiglitazone (EC50 = 0.034 μM). Hydrophobic interactions and van der Waals contacts are the primary chemical forces to stabilize the complex architecture of PPARγ LBD domain with these agonist ligands, while few hydrogen bonds, salt bridges and/or π-π stacking at the complex interfaces confer selectivity and specificity for the domain-agonist recognition. Discussion and conclusion: The integrated in vitro-in silico screening strategy can be successfully applied to rational discovery of biologically active compounds. The newly identified natural products with PPARγ agonistic potency are considered as promising lead scaffolds to develop novel chemical therapeutics for heart failure.

Highlights

  • Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) belong to superfamily of phylogenetically related protein termed nuclear hormone factor, which comprise of three subtypes: PPARa, Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-c (PPARc) and PPARb/d (Tyagi et al 2011)

  • The PPARc regulates various neurohumoral factors involved in the progression of heart failure, a disease marked by abnormal myocardial metabolism, fibrosis and insulin insensitivity

  • Accumulated evidence suggested that the production of tumour necrosis factor a (TNFa) by cardiac myocytes promotes the development and progression of heart failure, and PPARc agonists can potently inhibit the cardiac expression of TNFa through attenuating NF

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Summary

Introduction

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) belong to superfamily of phylogenetically related protein termed nuclear hormone factor, which comprise of three subtypes: PPARa, PPARc and PPARb/d (Tyagi et al 2011). The PPARc regulates various neurohumoral factors involved in the progression of heart failure, a disease marked by abnormal myocardial metabolism, fibrosis and insulin insensitivity. Its activating ligands (agonists) inhibit cardiac hypertrophy and ischaemia-reperfusion injury via a PPARc-independent pathway (Ehara et al 2004). Wojtkowska et al (2014) observed that PPARc expression level is considerably upregulated during development of heart failure in patients with coronary artery disease after coronary artery bypass-grafting. Accumulated evidence suggested that the production of tumour necrosis factor a (TNFa) by cardiac myocytes promotes the development and progression of heart failure, and PPARc agonists can potently inhibit the cardiac expression of TNFa through attenuating NF-

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