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Plasmepsin II inhibitory potential of phytochemicals isolated from African antimalarial plants: a computational approach.
PubMed
Authors: Faloye KO, Tripathi MK, Fakola EG, Adepiti AO, Adesida SA, Oyeleke IO, Adebayo PA, Aregbesola AE, Famuyiwa SO, Akinyele OF
Year
2025
Paper ID
992
Status
Peer-reviewed
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
170
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Plamepsin II has been identified as a therapeutic target in the life cycle and may lead to a drastic reduction in deaths caused by malaria worldwide. Africa flora is rich in medicinal qualities and possesses both simple and complex bioactive phytochemicals. This study utilized computational approaches like molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulation, quantum chemical calculations and ADMET to evaluate the plasmepsin II inhibitory properties of phytochemicals isolated from African antimalarial plants. Molecular docking was carried out to estimate the binding affinity of 229 phytochemicals whereby ekeberin A, dichamanetin, 10-hydroxyusambaresine, chamuvaritin and diuvaretin were selected. Further, RMSD and RMSF plots from the 100 ns simulation results showed that the screened phytochemicals were stable in the enzyme's binding pocket. The quantum chemical calculation revealed that all the phytochemicals are strong electrophiles, while ekeberin A was identified as the most stable and dichamanetin as the most reactive. Also, ADMET studies established the drug candidacy of the phytochemicals. Thus, these phytochemicals could act as good antimalarial agents after extensive and studies.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Plamepsin II has been identified as a therapeutic target in the life cycle and may lead to a drastic reduction in deaths caused by malaria worldwide.
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