In silico toxicity profiling of natural product compound libraries from African flora with anti-malarial and anti-HIV properties.

Journal: Computational biology and chemistry
PMID:

Abstract

This paper describes an analysis of the diversity and chemical toxicity assessment of three chemical libraries of compounds from African flora (the p-ANAPL, AfroMalariaDb, and Afro-HIV), respectively containing compounds exhibiting activities against diverse diseases, malaria and HIV. The diversity of the three data sets was done by comparison of the three most important principal components computed from standard molecular descriptors. This was also done by a study of the most common substructures (MCSS keys). Meanwhile, the in silico toxicity predictions were done through the identification of chemical structural alerts using Lhasa's knowledge based Derek system. The results show that the libraries occupy different chemical space and that only an insignificant part of the respective libraries could exhibit toxicities beyond acceptable limits. The predicted toxicities end points for compounds which were predicted to "plausible" were further discussed in the light of available experimental data in the literature. Toxicity predictions are in agreement when using a machine learning approach that employs graph-based structural signatures. The current study sheds further light towards the use of the studied chemical libraries for virtual screening purposes.

Authors

  • Pascal Amoa Onguéné
    Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Douala, P. O. Box 24157, Douala, Cameroon. Electronic address: amoapascal@yahoo.fr.
  • Conrad V Simoben
    Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Martin-Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Wolfgang-Langenbeck-Str. 4, 06120, Halle, Saale, Germany; Chemical and Bioactivity Information Centre, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Buea, P. O. Box 63, Buea, Cameroon. Electronic address: veranso.conrad@gmail.com.
  • Ghislain W Fotso
    Department of Organic Chemistry, University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroon. Electronic address: ghis152001@yahoo.fr.
  • Kerstin Andrae-Marobela
    Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Botswana,4775 Notwane Rd., Gaborone, Botswana. Electronic address: Marobelak@mopipi.ub.bw.
  • Sami A Khalid
    Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Science & Technology, Omdurman, Sudan. Electronic address: khalidseek@hotmail.com.
  • Bonaventure T Ngadjui
    Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Traditional Pharmacopeia, Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroon. Electronic address: ngadjuibt@yahoo.fr.
  • Luc Meva'a Mbaze
    Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Douala, P. O. Box 24157, Douala, Cameroon. Electronic address: lmbazze@yahoo.fr.
  • Fidele Ntie-Kang
    Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Martin-Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Wolfgang-Langenbeck-Str. 4, 06120, Halle, Saale, Germany; Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Buea, P. O. Box 63, Buea, Cameroon. Electronic address: ntiekfidele@gmail.com.