Article citationsMore>>
Adler, V., Yin, Z.M., Fuchs, S.Y., Benezra, M., Rosario, L., Tew, K.D., Pincus, M.R., Sardana, M., Henderson, C.J., Wolf, C.R., Davis, R.J. and Ronai, Z. (1999) Regulation of JNK signalling by GSTp. EMBO Journal, 18, 1321-1334. doi:10.1093/emboj/18.5.1321
has been cited by the following article:
-
TITLE:
Glutathione transferase-P1-1 binding with naturally occurring ligands: assessment by docking simulations
AUTHORS:
Anupam J. Das, Sreeda Chalil, Poonam Nigam, Pamela Magee, Omar Janneh, Richard Owusu-Apenten
KEYWORDS:
Glutathione Transferase; Docking; Vitamins; Phytochemicals
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Biophysical Chemistry,
Vol.2 No.4,
November
9,
2011
ABSTRACT: Glutathione transferase-P1-1 (hGSTP1-1), which is associated with acquired drug resistance in some tumour cells, requires two identical subunits for full activity. Naturally occurring inhibitors for GSTP1-1 quaternary structure could be interesting therapeutic agents. The aim of this study was to investigate potential binding sites for hGSTP1-1 interaction with ligands many of which occur naturally. Simulations were performed with commercial docking software and with GST monomer or dimer as template. Docking results using hGSTP1-1 dimer showed one binding site for most of the ligands tested. Lycopene, glutathione, ellagic acid, ethacrynic acid, quercetin, caffeic acid, ferulic acid, porphyrin, curcumin, cinnamic acid, and also α-tocopherol bound at the enzyme dimer subunit-subunit interface. In contrast, investigations using hGSTP1-1 monomer revealed three additional sites for ligand binding. In conclusion, the docking simulations suggest that the enzyme subunit interface may be important for hGSTP1-1 interactions with ligands. These findings may provide valuable insights for further research to identify naturally occurring therapeutic agents.