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    Unraveling PPARβ/δ nuclear receptor agonists via a drug-repurposing approach: HTVS-based ligand identification, molecular dynamics, pharmacokinetics, and in vitro anti-steatotic validation
    (RSC, 2025-04) Sharma, Pankaj Kumar; Murugesan, Sankaranarayanan; Deepa, P.R.
    Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are ligand-activated nuclear receptors with a crucial regulatory role in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism and are emerging druggable targets in “metabolic syndrome” (MetS) and cancers. However, there is a need to identify ligands that can activate specific PPAR subtypes, particularly PPARβ/δ, which is less studied compared with other PPAR isoforms (α and γ). Herein, using the drug-repurposing approach, the ZINC database of clinically approved drugs was screened to target the PPARβ/δ receptor through high-throughput-virtual-screening, followed by molecular docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. The top-scoring ligands were subjected to drug-likeness analysis. The hit molecule was tested in an in vitro model of NAFLD (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease). The top five ligands with strong binding affinity towards PPARβ/δ were canagliflozin > empagliflozin > lumacaftor > eprosartan > dapagliflozin. RMSD/RMSF analysis demonstrated stable protein–ligand complexation (PLC) by the top-scoring ligands with PPARβ/δ. In silico ADMET prediction analysis revealed favorable pharmacokinetic profiles of these top five ligands. Canagliflozin showed significant (P < 0.001) dose-dependent decrease in lipid accumulation and the associated oxidative stress-inflammatory response, suggesting its promising anti-steatotic potential. These outcomes pave the way for further validation and development of PPAR activity-modulating therapeutics
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    A clustering and graph deep learning-based framework for COVID-19 drug repurposing
    (Elsevier, 2024-09) Agarwal, Vinti; Deepa, P.R.
    Drug repurposing (or repositioning) is the process of finding new therapeutic uses for drugs already approved by drug regulatory authorities (e.g., the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)) for other diseases. This involves analysing the interactions between different biological entities, such as drug targets (genes/proteins and biological pathways) and drug properties, to discover novel drug–target or drug–disease relations. Machine learning and deep learning models have successfully analysed complex heterogeneous data with applications in the biomedical domain, and have also been used for drug repurposing. This study presents a novel unsupervised machine learning framework that utilizes a graph-based autoencoder for multi-feature type clustering on heterogeneous drug data. The dataset consists of 438 drugs, of which 224 are under clinical trials for COVID-19 (category A). The rest are systematically filtered to ensure the safety and efficacy of the treatment (category B). The framework solely relies on reported drug data, including its pharmacological properties, chemical/physical properties, interaction with the host, and efficacy in different publicly available COVID-19 assays. Our machine-learning framework revealed three clusters of interest and provided recommendations featuring the top 15 drugs for COVID-19 drug repurposing, which were shortlisted based on the predicted clusters that were dominated by category A drugs. Our framework can be extended to support other datasets and drug repurposing studies with the availability of our open-source code.