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Glycolic acid inhibits enzymatic, hemorrhagic and edema-inducing activities of BaP1, a P–I metalloproteinase from Bothrops asper snake venom: Insights from docking and molecular modeling

 

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Autores: Pereañez, Jaime Andrés, Patiño Llano, Arley Camilo, Rey Suarez, Paola, Núñez Rangel, Vitelbina, Henao Castañeda, Isabel Cristina, Rucavado Romero, Alexandra
格式: artículo original
Fecha de Publicación:2013
实物特征:Glycolic acid (GA) (2-Hydroxyethanoic acid) is widely used as chemical peeling agent in Dermatologyand,morerecently,asatherapeuticandcosmeticcompoundinthefieldofskin careanddiseasetreatment.Inthisworkwetestedtheinhibitoryabilityofglycolicacidonthe enzymatic, hemorrhagic and edema-inducing activities of BaP1, a P–I metalloproteinase from Bothrops asper venom, which induces a variety of toxic actions. Glycolic acid inhibited the proteolytic activity of BaP1 on azocasein, with an IC50 of 1.67 mM. The compound was also effective at inhibiting the hemorrhagic activity of BaP1 in skin and muscle in experi ments involving preincubation of enzyme and inhibitor prior to injection. When BaP1 was injected i.m. and then, at the same site, different concentrations of glycolic acid were administered at either 0 or 5 min, 7 mM solutions of the inhibitor partially abrogated hemorrhagic activity when administered at 0 min. Moreover, glycolic acid inhibited, in a concentration-dependent manner, edema-forming activity of BaP1 in the footpad. In order to have insights on the mode of action of glycolic acid, UV–vis and intrinsic fluorescence studies were performed. Results of these assays suggest that glycolic acid interacts directly with BaP1 and chelates the Zn2þ ion at the active site. These findings were supported by molecular docking results, which suggested that glycolic acid forms hydrogen bonds with residues Glu143, Arg110andAla111oftheenzyme.Additionally,molecularmodelingresults suggest that the inhibitor chelates Zn2þ, with a distance of 3.58 A, and may occupy part of substrate binding cleft of BaP1. Our results suggest that glycolic acid is a candidate for the development of inhibitors to be used in snakebite envenomation.
País:Kérwá
机构:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
语言:Inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/103840
在线阅读:https://hdl.handle.net/10669/103840
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxicon.2013.05.013
Palabra clave:metalloproteinase
glycolic acid
bothrops asper
local tissue damage