Molecules (May 2022)

Biocomputational Assessment of Natural Compounds as a Potent Inhibitor to Quorum Sensors in <i>Ralstonia solanacearum</i>

  • Sunil Kumar,
  • Khurshid Ahmad,
  • Santosh Kumar Behera,
  • Dipak T. Nagrale,
  • Anurag Chaurasia,
  • Manoj Kumar Yadav,
  • Sneha Murmu,
  • Yachana Jha,
  • Mahendra Vikram Singh Rajawat,
  • Deepti Malviya,
  • Udai B. Singh,
  • Raja Shankar,
  • Minaketan Tripathy,
  • Harsh Vardhan Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27093034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 9
p. 3034

Abstract

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Ralstonia solanacearum is among the most damaging bacterial phytopathogens with a wide number of hosts and a broad geographic distribution worldwide. The pathway of phenotype conversion (Phc) is operated by quorum-sensing signals and modulated through the (R)-methyl 3-hydroxypalmitate (3-OH PAME) in R. solanacearum. However, the molecular structures of the Phc pathway components are not yet established, and the structural consequences of 3-OH PAME on quorum sensing are not well studied. In this study, 3D structures of quorum-sensing proteins of the Phc pathway (PhcA and PhcR) were computationally modeled, followed by the virtual screening of the natural compounds library against the predicted active site residues of PhcA and PhcR proteins that could be employed in limiting signaling through 3-OH PAME. Two of the best scoring common ligands ZINC000014762512 and ZINC000011865192 for PhcA and PhcR were further analyzed utilizing orbital energies such as HOMO and LUMO, followed by molecular dynamics simulations of the complexes for 100 ns to determine the ligands binding stability. The findings indicate that ZINC000014762512 and ZINC000011865192 may be capable of inhibiting both PhcA and PhcR. We believe that, after further validation, these compounds may have the potential to disrupt bacterial quorum sensing and thus control this devastating phytopathogenic bacterial pathogen.

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