Litcius/Paper detail

Molecular interaction of antiviral drug penciclovir with DNA and HSA insights from experimental and docking studies

Waleed Abd Ali AAkool, Soheila Kashanian, Saba Hadidi

2024Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics10 citationsDOI

Abstract

One approach to accelerate the availability of new cancer drugs is to test drugs approved for other conditions as anticancer agents. During recent decades, penciclovir (PNV) has been frequently utilized as a potent antiviral drug, in particular against infections caused by herpes viruses. Many antivirals interact with DNA and change their expression level, so determining the binding mode is of great importance. In our laboratory, we have focused our attention to design improved drugs that target cellular DNA, to understand the mechanism of action at the molecular level, and also to investigate the effect of antiviral drugs as anticancer agents. The results of ct-DNA-PNV interactions at physiological pH using fluorescence spectroscopy, UV-visible absorption spectroscopy, and molecular modeling reveal this drug binds well to ct-DNA through groove binding. The circular dichroism measurements displayed that PNV caused a slight change in the DNA structure which affirmed that the binding of PNV with the DNA occurs through the groove mode. Besides, multi-spectroscopic and molecular docking were used to evaluate how PNV interacts with human serum albumin under physiological conditions. The findings of fluorescence quenching suggested that static quenching was involved in the spontaneous development of HSA-PNV complex through hydrophobic force. The docking simulation results validated the findings of spectroscopic techniques.

Topics & Concepts

Docking (animal)Circular dichroismDNABiophysicsChemistryHuman serum albuminPenciclovirMolecular modelDrugQuenching (fluorescence)Combinatorial chemistryBiochemistryComputational biologyPharmacologyFluorescenceBiologyVirologyVirusMedicineHerpes simplex virusPhysicsNursingQuantum mechanicsProtein Interaction Studies and Fluorescence AnalysisMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Research