Therapeutic options of covid-19 management: computational approach targeting main protease (Mpro)
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Main protease (Mpro) enzyme of SARS-CoV-2 is involved in the digestion of viral
polyproteins and considered as an attractive drug target for antiviral drug design. This
study aims to carry out the molecular docking, density functional theory (DFT) studies,
prediction of ADMET properties of selected potential antiviral molecules, study the
efficacy of selected hits on predicted mutated Main protease (Mpro) enzyme, and the
drug-drug interaction of potential hits. The study provides an insight into biomolecular
interactions to understand the inhibitory mechanism and the spatial orientation of the
ligands and further, identification of key amino acid residues within the substratebinding
pocket that can be applied for structure-based drug design.Molecular docking
of FDA approved drugs (1167) screened through stringent parameters and
our formula for preference index identified tadalafil as competitive inhibitor of
proteolytic function of main protease.In the docking studies, tadalafil exhibited
superiority in binding with the crystal structure of Mproover the other selected molecules
in this study, suggestedby the crucial roles of CYS145, HIS163, and GLU166 in the
interaction within the activesite of COVID-19 Mpro. Further, the binding affinity in the
predicted mutated structuresof main protease was also found to be higher than wild type
suggesting its broad use.
The thermodynamic properties and molecular orbital properties investigated for this
compound followed the required drug like property of a probable drug. The original
library of FDA compounds was docked with human cytochrome P450 3A4 and the
inhibitory activity of drospirenone suggested its impeding caliber in clearance of
tadalafil. Overall, the present in silico study indicated the direction to combat COVID19
using FDA-approved drugs as therapeutic alternative for viral inhibition or
symptom management, which do not need much toxicity studies and could also serve
as starting points for lead optimization in drug discovery.
Keywords: ADMET, COVID-19, drug discovery, Mpro, molecular docking, therapeutic
alternative
