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In silico analysis of novel Triacontafluoropentadec-1-ene as a sustainable replacement for dodecane in fisheries microplastics: Molecular docking, dynamics simulation and pharmacophore studies of acetylcholinesterase activity
Summary
Using computer simulations, researchers studied how common fisheries microplastic chemicals interact with acetylcholinesterase, a brain enzyme essential for nerve and muscle function. They found that dodecane and polypropylene bind strongly to this enzyme, potentially disrupting nervous system function. The study identified possible safer chemical alternatives, highlighting how microplastics from fishing industry plastics could contribute to neurological health risks in both marine life and humans who consume seafood.
Plastics play an essential role in modern fisheries and their degradation releases micro- and nano-sized plastic particles which further causes ecological and human health hazards through various environmental contamination pathways and toxicity mechanisms, which can cause respiratory problems, cancer, reproductive toxicity, endocrine disruption and neurological effects in humans. This study utilized various bioinformatics tools through multi-step computational analyses to investigate the interactions between prevalent fisheries microplastics and the key protein receptor acetylcholinesterase (AChE), which is associated with neurotoxicity, as it can interfere with nerve impulses and muscle control. Our results indicate that the binding of seven polymers within AChE's active site, with dodecane and polypropylene exhibited highest affinity with hydrogen bonding were observed through Molecular docking of different program (PyRx) and servers (CB-Dock, eDock) then the stability of AChE-dodecane and AChE-polypropylene complexes were observed through MD simulations for 100 ns. Further analysis of dodecane was done by using pharmacophore modelling and virtual screening. The pharmacophore model of dodecane is based on six hydrophobic rings. Using this model, we screened among thousands of substrates form (CMNPD, COCONUT, NPASS, NANPDB, and ZINC) database and identified fifty highly similar candidates that align with dodecane's structure and interaction with acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The compound triacontafluoropentadec-1-ene exhibited highest binding affinity (score: -9.6) which was further confirmed through molecular dynamics for 100 ns. The key finding for this study is triacontafluoropentadec-1-ene as a promising alternative to dodecane, and the study highlights that the integrated in silico framework presents a valuable computational model for guiding future guidelines on environmental safety through prioritizing constituents and accelerated discovery of alternatives. These findings will help us identify the most hazardous plastics through ranking and characterizing the substance for sustainably "greening" fisheries worldwide. The study forecasts the groundwork of these compounds, which may be able to reduce the environmental toxicity of microplastics in future.
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