Interactions of coumarin and amine ligands with six cytochrome P450 2D6 allelic variants: Molecular docking

Amelia Nathania Dong, Nafees Ahemad, Yan Pan, Uma Devi Palanisamy, Chin Eng Ong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Human CYP2D6 contributes extensively to the biotransformation of important therapeutic drugs. CYP2D6 substrate and inhibitor specificity may be affected by genetic polymorphism. This study aimed to characterize interactions of three typical ligands, 3-cyano-7-ethoxycoumarin, fluoxetine and terbinafine with six CYP2D6 variants using molecular docking simulations. The compounds were docked individually to the CYP2D6 models based on published crystal structure (PDB code: 3TBG). All ligands bound within the active site pocket near the heme. Binding involved residues found in critical secondary structures that formed the active site boundary: B-C loop, F helix, F-G loop, β-1 strands and I helix. Twenty-five amino acids were involved in the binding, and all were located in the known substrate recognition sites. Hydrophobic bonds involving phenylalanine (Phe120, Phe384) dominated CEC binding whereas electrostatic bonds between the protonated nitrogen with acidic residues (Glu216, Glu222, Asp301) dominated in binding of fluoxetine and terbinafine. Collectively, the subtle structural changes in the active site and substrate access channels induced by the mutations in the variants contributed to differential ligand docking poses. This study has provided insights into important molecular properties for CYP2D6 catalysis and inhibition, and formed basis for further exploration of structural determinants for potency and specificity of CYP2D6 ligands.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100284
Number of pages14
JournalComputational Toxicology
Volume27
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2023

Keywords

  • 3-Cyano-7-ethoxycoumarin
  • Allelic variant
  • Cytochrome P450 2D6
  • Fluoxetine
  • Molecular docking
  • Terbinafine

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