%A Hedwin Kitdorlang Dkhar %A Anupriya Gopalsamy %A Saurabh Loharch %A Amandeep Kaur %A Isha Bhutani %A Kanmani Saminathan %A Ella Bhagyaraj %A Vemika Chandra %A Kunchithapadam Swaminathan %A Pushpa Agrawal %A Raman Parkesh %A Pawan Gupta %O Copyright of this article belongs to ASBMB. %J The Journal of biological chemistry %T Discovery of Mycobacterium tuberculosis ?-1,4-glucan branching enzyme (GlgB) inhibitors by structure- and ligand-based virtual screening. %X GlgB (?-1,4-glucan branching enzyme) is the key enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of ?-glucan, which plays a significant role in the virulence and pathogenesis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Because ?-glucans are implicated in the survival of both replicating and non-replicating bacteria, there exists an exigent need for the identification and development of novel inhibitors for targeting enzymes, such as GlgB, involved in this pathway. We have used the existing structural information of M. tuberculosis GlgB for high throughput virtual screening and molecular docking. A diverse database of 330,000 molecules was used for identifying novel and efficacious therapeutic agents for targeting GlgB. We also used three-dimensional shape as well as two-dimensional similarity matrix methods to identify diverse molecular scaffolds that inhibit M. tuberculosis GlgB activity. Virtual hits were generated after structure and ligand-based screening followed by filters based on interaction with human GlgB and in silico pharmacokinetic parameters. These hits were experimentally evaluated and resulted in the discovery of a number of structurally diverse chemical scaffolds that target M. tuberculosis GlgB. Although a number of inhibitors demonstrated in vitro enzyme inhibition, two compounds in particular showed excellent inhibition of in vivo M. tuberculosis survival and its ability to get phagocytosed. This work shows that in silico docking and three-dimensional chemical similarity could be an important therapeutic approach for developing inhibitors to specifically target the M. tuberculosis GlgB enzyme. %N 1 %K Docking; Molecular Docking; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Pathogenesis; Small Molecule %P 76-89 %V 290 %D 2015 %I ASBMB %L open1650