In silico molecular modeling and simulations of black tea theaflavins revealed theaflavin-3’-gallate as putative liver X receptor-beta agonist
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Date
2023
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Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics Volume 41
Abstract
The low constitutive activation of Liver X receptor, an endogenous nuclear receptor with
two subtypes (α and β), is a condition lying at the crossroad of cancer and
cardiovascular disease. Both natural and synthetic Liver X receptor agonists have
reportedly shown remarkable antiproliferative and atheroprotective effects but the
repeated doses of its synthetic ones are also paradoxically associated with
hyperlipidaemic effects and neurotoxicity, though attributed to the alpha subtype. This
highlights the need for novel, safe, and potent LXR-beta-selective agonists.
Hypocholesterolaemic effects of black theaflavins have been widely reported, but data
on the exact theaflavin compound (s) responsible for these effects is currently lacking.
Neither is information on the possible modulatory effects of the compound (s) on LXRbeta
nor its possible implications in the context of drug development for cardiovascular
diseases and cancers is explored. On this account, we investigated the potential
interaction of four main theaflavin monomers (TF1, TF2A, TF2B & TF3) with human
LXR-beta through robust computational modelling that entails molecular docking, free
energy calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. The ligands were further
profiled (in silico) for absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and toxicological
properties. Our result revealed theaflavin TF2B as a putative LXR-beta agonist, possibly
responsible for the widely observed hypocholesterolaemic effect in black tea. This
finding, while encouraging, needs to be experimentally verified in wet studies.
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Keywords
Liver X receptor-beta theflavins black tea theaflavin-3'-gallate hypocholesterolaemia