1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of polyphenols from Broussonetia papyrifera as SARS CoV-2 main protease inhibitors using in silico docking and molecular dynamics simulation approaches

Identification of polyphenols from Broussonetia papyrifera as SARS CoV-2 main protease inhibitors using in silico docking and molecular dynamics simulation approaches

  • J Biomol Struct Dyn. 2021 Oct;39(17):6747-6760. doi: 10.1080/07391102.2020.1802347.
Rajesh Ghosh 1 Ayon Chakraborty 1 Ashis Biswas 1 Snehasis Chowdhuri 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 School of Basic Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Bhubaneswar, Bhubaneswar, India.
Abstract

The current COVID-19 pandemic is caused by SARS CoV-2. To date, ∼463,000 people died worldwide due to this disease. Several attempts have been taken in search of effective drugs to control the spread of SARS CoV-2 Infection. The main protease (Mpro) from SARS CoV-2 plays a vital role in viral replication and thus serves as an important drug target. This Mpro shares a high degree of sequence similarity (>96%) with the same protease from SARS CoV-1 and MERS. It was already reported that Broussonetia papyrifera Polyphenols efficiently inhibit the catalytic activity of SARS CoV-1 and MERS Mpro. But whether these Polyphenols exhibit any inhibitory effect on SARS CoV-2 Mpro is far from clear. To understand this fact, here we have adopted computational approaches. Polyphenols having proper drug-likeness properties and two repurposed drugs (lopinavir and darunavir; having binding affinity -7.3 to -7.4 kcal/mol) were docked against SARS CoV-2 Mpro to study their binding properties. Only six Polyphenols (broussochalcone A, papyriflavonol A, 3'-(3-methylbut-2-enyl)-3',4',7-trihydroxyflavane, broussoflavan A, kazinol F and kazinol J) had interaction with both the catalytic residues (His41 and Cys145) of Mpro and exhibited good binding affinity (-7.6 to -8.2 kcal/mol). Molecular dynamic simulations (100 ns) revealed that all Mpro-polyphenol complexes are more stable, conformationally less fluctuated; slightly less compact and marginally expanded than Mpro-darunavir/lopinavir complex. Even the number of intermolecular H-bond and MM-GBSA analysis suggested that these six Polyphenols are more potent Mpro inhibitors than the two repurposed drugs (lopinavir and darunavir) and may serve as promising anti-COVID-19 drugs.

Keywords

Broussonetia papyrifera polyphenols; COVID-19; SARS CoV-2 main protease; docking; molecular dynamics simulation.

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