The discovery of natural drug metabolites is a leading contributor to fulfilling the sustainable development goal of finding solutions to global health challenges. Depsidones are a class of polyketides that have been separated from lichens, fungi, sponges, and plants and possess various bioactivities, including cytotoxic, antimicrobial, antimalarial, antituberculosis, acetylcholinesterase and α-glucosidase inhibition, and anti-inflammatory effects. Endocannabinoid receptors (CB1 and CB2) are G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), and their activation mediates many physiological processes. CB1 is the dominant subtype in the central nervous system, while CB2 is mainly expressed in the immune system. The two receptors exhibit high heterogeneity, making developing selective ligands a great challenge. Attempts to develop CB2 selective agonists for treating inflammatory diseases and neuropathic pain have not been successful due to the high homology of the binding sites of the CB receptors. In this work, 235 depsidones from various sources were investigated for the possibility of identifying CB2-selective agonists by performing multiple docking studies, including induced fit docking and Prime/molecular mechanics-generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA) calculations to predict the binding mode and free energy. Simplicildone J (10), lobaric acid (110), mollicellin Q (101), garcinisidone E (215), mollicellin P (100), paucinervin Q (149), and boremexin C (161) had the highest binding scores (-12.134 kcal/mol, -11.944 kcal/mol, -11.479 kcal/mol, -11.394 kcal/mol, -11.322 kcal/mol, -11.305 kcal/mol, and -11.254 kcal/mol, respectively) when screened against the CB2 receptor (PDB ID: 6KPF). The molecular dynamic simulation was performed on the compounds with the highest binding scores. The computational outcomes show that garcinisidone E (215) and paucinervin Q (149) could be substantial candidates for CB2 receptor activation and warrant further in vivo and in vitro investigations.
Read full abstract