Docking for Drug Interface Residues of Modelled VPS33B of Human with PtpA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CDC1551

Article Preview

Abstract:

VPS33B, a human Vacuolar Protein Sorting (VPS) protein which mediates the phagolysosomal fusion in macrophage of the eukaryotic organisms. This protein has a great role during the mycobacterial infections, which binds with the Mycobacterium protein tyrosine phosphatase A (PtpA). A single functional domain of PtpA has been identified using SMART domain databases, followed by finding the antigenicity of PtpA using CLC main workbench tool. The protein-protein interaction network predicts the interface of biological functions of proteins, built by using Cytoscape 2.8.3 version tool for manual literature survey of protein sets. According to the literature the specific interactivity of PtpA with VPS33B of human lead to pathogenesis, and provided a good platform to find the structure of VPS33B as it lacks the 3 dimensional structure in PDB. Homology Modelling of VPS33B provides a significant properties to design a specific drug through screening the drug databases (eDrug3D). The modelled protein has been validated through SAVES server maintained by NIH and UCLA with the standard Ramachandran plot with accuracy of 90.7 %. From our findings the interface residues are very crucial points which has been found through docking the modelled protein and Mycobacterium protein and interface residues were selected manually using PyMol software

Info:

[1] Ge H., Walhout A.J., Vidal M., Trends Genetics 19 (2003) 551-560.

Google Scholar

[2] Hong Yu, 2007. Ph.D dissertation, A&M University. Texas.

Google Scholar

[3] R. D. Fleischmann, D. Alland, J. A. Eisen et al., Journal of Bacteriology 184 (2002) 5479-5490.

Google Scholar

[4] Reddy T. B. K., Robert Riley K. Schoolnik Gary, Nucleic Acids Research 37 (2009) D499-D508.

Google Scholar

[5] Dennis Wong, D. Joseph Chao, Yossef Av-Gay, Trends in Microbial Biotechnology 21 (2013) 100-109.

Google Scholar

[6] Manuela Pruess, Paul Kersey, Rolf Apweiler, Insilico biology 5 (2004) 0017.

Google Scholar

[7] CLC bio A/S. The CLC Main Workbench 6.8 is developed by Science Park Aarhus. Finlandsgade, 8200 Aarhus N, and Denmark. (2013) 10-12.

Google Scholar

[8] A. S. Kolaskar, P. C. Tongaonkar, FEBS Letters 276 (1990) 172-174.

Google Scholar

[9] E. E. Snyder, N. Kampanya, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 35 (2006) D401-D406.

Google Scholar

[10] D. Tim Driscoll, Matthew Dyer, T. M. Murali, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 37 (2009) D647-D650.

DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn799

Google Scholar

[11] Paul Shannon, Andrew Markiel, Owen Ozier, Genome Research 13 (2003) 2498-2504.

Google Scholar

[12] Jorg Schultz, Frank Milpetz, Peer Bork, et al., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 95 (1998) 5857-5864.

Google Scholar

[13] M. Helen Berman, John Westbrook, Zukang Feng, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 28 (2000) 235-242.

Google Scholar

[14] R.A. Laskowski, E.G. Hutchinson, A.D. Michie, et al., Trends in Biochemical Sciences 22 (1997) 488-490.

Google Scholar

[15] Bhusan K. Kuntal, Polamarasetty Aparoy, Pallu Reddanna, BMC Research Notes 3 (2010) 226.

Google Scholar

[16] WL. DeLano, DeLano Scientific, San Carlos, California CCP4 Newsletter on Protein Crystallography (2002).

Google Scholar

[17] R. A. Laskowski, M. W. MacArthur, D. S. Moss, et al., Journal of Applied Crystallography 26 (1993) 283-291.

Google Scholar

[18] S. F. Altschul, T. L.Madden, A. A. Schäffer, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 25 (1997) 389-402.

Google Scholar

[19] S. F. Altschul, W. Gish, W. Miller, et al., Journal of Molecular Biology 215 (1990) 403-410.

Google Scholar

[20] S. S. Sheik, P. Sundararajan, Hussain A.S.Z. et al., Bioinformatics 18 (2002) 1548-1549.

Google Scholar

[21] Ranjit Kumar, Bindu Nanduri, BMC Bioinformatics 11 (2010) 1471-2105.

Google Scholar

[22] T. David Barkan, P. Fred Davis, Narayanan Eswar., et al., Protein Science 16 (2007) 2585-2596.

Google Scholar

[23] Paolo Gaibani, T. Maria Pellegrino, Giada Rossini, et al., BMC Infectious Diseases 10 (2010) 1471-2334.

Google Scholar

[24] J. Schultz, R. R. Copley, T. Doerks, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 28 (2000) 231-234.

Google Scholar

[25] U. Pieper, N. Eswar, H. Braberg, et al., Nucleic Acids Research 34 (2006) D291-D295. ( Received 20 May 2014; accepted 28 May 2014 )

Google Scholar