Title of article :
Benzimidazole Derivatives in Identifying Novel Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors: A Combination of 3D-QSAR, Docking and Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Author/Authors :
El Khatabi, K Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco , El-Mernissi, R Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco , Aanouz, I Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco , Ajana, M.A Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco , Lakhlifi, T Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco , Shahinozzaman, M Department of Nutrition and Food Science - University of Maryland - College Park - MD, USA , Bouachrine, M Molecular chemistry and Natural Substances Laboratory - Faculty of Science - University Moulay Ismail - Meknes, Morocco
Abstract :
Acetylcholinesterase is a promising therapeutic candidate for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders, acetylcholine dysfunction,
and other cognitive problems. In the current study, a 3D-QSAR approach was applied to a series of benzimidazole derivatives to reveal the
key influencing factors contributing to their acetylcholinesterase inhibition activity and selectivity. The developed two models, CoMFA
and CoMSIA, were found to be internally validated using a training set of compounds, and both models demonstrated significant statistical
reliability. Contour maps of developed models were employed to examine the main structural characteristics of inhibitors that affected their
potency. It was found that electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are significantly important for improving the inhibitory activities,
leading to the design of four novel acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Among the newly designed compounds, compound A1 with the highest
predicted activity was subjected to detailed molecular docking and compared to the most active compound. Furthermore, 100 ns molecular
dynamics (MD) simulation was conducted to explore the binding modes and conformational modifications throughout the interaction of
compound A1 and acetylcholinesterase. The docking and MD simulation findings showed that the newly designed compound A1 remained
stable within the active site of the identified acetylcholinesterase receptor, demonstrating its promising role as a new potential
acetylcholinesterase drug candidate.
Keywords :
Benzimidazole , Molecular modeling , Computational chemistry , Alzheimer’s disease , Acetylcholinesterase
Journal title :
Physical Chemistry Research