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Computational drug repurposing reveals Alectinib as a potential lead targeting Cathepsin S for therapeutic developments against cancer and chronic pain

  • Mohammed Alrouji
  • , Mohammed S. Alshammari
  • , Sharif Alhajlah
  • , Syed Tasqeeruddin
  • , Khuzin Dinislam
  • , Anas Shamsi
  • , Saleha Anwar
  • Shaqra University
  • King Khalid University
  • Bashkir State Medical University
  • Ajman University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cathepsin S (CathS) is a cysteine protease known to play a role in extracellular matrix (ECM) re-modelling, antigen presentation, immune cells polarisation, and cancer progression and chronic pain pathophysiology. CathS also causes an immunosuppressive environment in solid tumors and is involved in nociceptive signaling. Although several small-molecule inhibitors with favorable in vivo properties have been developed, their clinical utility is limited due to resistance, off-target effects, and suboptimal efficacy. Therefore, alternative therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. In the present study, we utilized an integrated virtual screening protocol to screen 3,500 commercially available FDA-approved drug molecules from DrugBank against the CathS crystal structure, based on which drug-likeness profile and interaction studies were performed to filter putative candidates. Alectinib was found to be a top hit and had significant interactions with the important active-site residues His278 and Cys139. PASS predictions suggested relevant anticancer and anti-pain activities for Alectinib in reference to the control inhibitor Q1N. Later, 500-ns molecular dynamics simulations under the CHARMM36 condition revealed that the CathS-Alectinib complex maintained its structural stability, as indicated by conformational parameters, hydrogen-bond persistence, and essential dynamics analyses. Further MM-PBSA calculations also confirmed a favorable binding free energy (ΔG –20.16 ± 2.59 kcal/mol) dominated by the van der Waals and electrostatic contributions. These computational findings suggest that Alectinib may have potential as a repurposed CathS inhibitor, warranting further experimental testing in relevant cancer and chronic pain models. Notably, these results are based solely on computational analysis and require empirical validation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1666573
JournalFrontiers in Bioinformatics
Volume5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • cancer
  • cathepsin S
  • chronic pain
  • drug repurposing
  • small molecule inhibitors
  • virtual screening

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