Abstract

Commercially available pesticides were examined as Mus musculus and Homo sapiens acetylcholinesterase (mAChE and hAChE) inhibitors by means of ligand-based (LB) and structure-based (SB) in silico approaches. Initially, the crystal structures of simazine, monocrotophos, dimethoate, and acetamiprid were reproduced using various force fields. Subsequently, LB alignment rules were assessed and applied to determine the inter synaptic conformations of atrazine, propazine, carbofuran, carbaryl, tebufenozide, imidacloprid, diuron, monuron, and linuron. Afterwards, molecular docking and dynamics SB studies were performed on either mAChE or hAChE, to predict the listed pesticides’ binding modes. Calculated energies of global minima (Eglob_min) and free energies of binding (∆Gbinding) were correlated with the pesticides’ acute toxicities (i.e., the LD50 values) against mice, as well to generate the model that could predict the LD50s against humans. Although for most of the pesticides the low Eglob_min correlates with the high acute toxicity, it is the ∆Gbinding that conditions the LD50 values for all the evaluated pesticides. Derived pLD50 = f(∆Gbinding) mAChE model may predict the pLD50 against hAChE, too. The hAChE inhibition by atrazine, propazine, and simazine (the most toxic pesticides) was elucidated by SB quantum mechanics (QM) DFT mechanistic and concentration-dependent kinetic studies, enriching the knowledge for design of less toxic pesticides.

Highlights

  • Pesticides [1] are either chemical or biological agents, widely used in agriculture [2], that deter, incapacitate, kill, or otherwise discourage pests

  • Conformational analysis (CA)of studies arein reported for simazine [9], monocrotophos [10], 2.1

  • Studies are reported for simazine monocrotophos

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Summary

Introduction

Pesticides [1] are either chemical or biological agents, widely used in agriculture [2], that deter, incapacitate, kill, or otherwise discourage pests. This report considers the pharmacology of common agricultural pesticides used in particular in the Western Balkans region [7,8]: atrazine, simazine, propazine, carbofuran, monocrotophos, dimethoate, carbaryl, tebufenozide, imidacloprid, acetamiprid, diuron, monuron, and linuron (Table 1). Despite their widespread usage, experimental crystal structures deposited at Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC) are available only for simazine [9], monocrotophos [10], dimethoate [11], and acetamiprid [12], highlighting the poor availability of either ligand-based (CCDC deposition) or structure-based (Protein Data Bank (PDB) deposition) information about these compounds

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