4.6 Article

A New Insight into Toxicity of Colchicine Analogues by Molecular Docking Analysis Based on Intestinal Tight Junction Protein ZO-1

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27061797

Keywords

colchicine analogues; gastrointestinal toxicity; intestinal tight junction protein ZO-1; molecular docking; structure-toxicity relationship; metabolic detoxication

Funding

  1. Shanghai Key Lab of Forensic Medicine, China [KF202005]

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In this study, the gastrointestinal toxicity of colchicine analogues was investigated using molecular docking analysis. The results revealed the structure-toxicity relationships and the mechanism of action. The study found that hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic effect played a role in gastrointestinal toxicity, while metabolic transformation attenuated the toxicity.
Colchicine (COL) is a well-known plant alkaloid long used for medical purposes due to the selective anti-inflammatory effect on acute gouty arthritis. It is also a kind of mitosis toxin with strong inhibitory effects of cell division and is therefore being applied to the treatment of various cancers. However, this product shows a variety of adverse effects that are significantly correlated with the dosage and have attracted much attention. For the first time, the present work obtained a new insight into the gastrointestinal toxicity of colchicine analogues by molecular docking analysis, which was based on the 3D structure of intestinal tight junction protein ZO-1 and the ligand library containing dozens of small-molecule compounds with the basic skeleton of COL and its metabolites. The binding energy and mode of protein-ligand interaction were investigated to better understand the structure-toxicity relationships of COL analogues and the mechanism of action as well. Cluster analysis clearly demonstrated the strong correlation between the binding energy and toxicity of ligand molecules. The interaction mode further revealed that the hydrogen bonding (via the C-7 amide or C-9 carbonyl group) and hydrophobic effect (at ring A or C) were both responsible for ZO-1-related gastrointestinal toxicity of COL analogues, while metabolic transformation via phase I and/or phase II reaction would significantly attenuate the gastrointestinal toxicity of colchicine, indicating an effective detoxication pathway through metabolism.

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