AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the potential of phytocompounds from green jackfruit flour methanol extract (JME) in combating obesity-linked diabetes mellitus using advanced pharmacological and molecular modeling techniques.
  • It identifies 15 key genes associated with 11 bioactive compounds in JME, with MAPK3 found to be the most crucial gene linked to insulin signaling pathways.
  • Molecular docking simulations reveal that compounds like caffeic acid and syringic acid exhibit strong binding affinity to MAPK3, suggesting their effectiveness as potential treatments for the condition.

Article Abstract

The current study investigates the effectiveness of phytocompounds from the whole green jackfruit flour methanol extract (JME) against obesity-linked diabetes mellitus using integrated network pharmacology and molecular modeling approach. Through network pharmacology, druglikeness and pharmacokinetics, molecular docking simulations, GO analysis, molecular dynamics simulations, and binding free energy analyses, it aims to look into the mechanism of the JME phytocompounds in the amelioration of obesity-linked diabetes mellitus. There are 15 predicted genes corresponding to the 11 oral bioactive compounds of JME. The most important of these 15 genes was MAPK3. According to the network analysis, the insulin signaling pathway has been predicted to have the strongest affinity to MAPK3 protein, which was chosen as the target. With regard to the molecular docking simulation, the greatest notable binding affinity for MAPK3 was discovered to be caffeic acid (-8.0 kJ/mol), deoxysappanone B 7,3'-dimethyl ether acetate (DBDEA) (-8.2 kJ/mol), and syringic acid (-8.5 kJ/mol). All the compounds were found to be stable inside the inhibitor binding pocket of the enzyme during molecular dynamics simulation. During binding free energy calculation, all the compounds chiefly used Van der Waal's free energy to bind with the target protein (caffeic acid: 102.296 kJ/mol, DBDEA: -104.268 kJ/mol, syringic acid: -100.171 kJ/mol). Based on these findings, it may be inferred that the reported JME phytocompounds could be used for in vitro and in vivo research, with the goal of targeting MAPK3 inhibition for the treatment of obesity-linked diabetes mellitus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9886246PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0280847PLOS

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