Abstract
In silico Drug discovery and development of novel multi-target molecules is an interdisciplinary, expensive and time-consuming procedure. Computer aided drug discovery advancements during the past decades have improved the way of pharmaceutical research design of novel bioactive huper-structured drug-gable molecules. Computer aided drug design helps in reducing the cost and time for drug discovery process which otherwise takes many years. Virtual screening and docking studies helped to obtain ligand molecules that can inhibit the important Proteins involved in the pathogenesis of Ebola virus. It is noticed that the chemical compounds might be the promising candidates drug-like small targeted compounds for further pre-clinical and clinical investigation, and that the NP and the octapeptides ATLQAIAS and ATLQAENV, as well as AVLQSGFR, might be pre-clinically translated and antisense converted to effective direct inhibitors against the Ebola Virus Fusion Conserved Proteoma. Meanwhile, we in silico generated conserved octapeptides mimotopic pharmaco-ligands based on the “distorted key energy binding fitness scoring” theory to in-silico anti-sense peptides by in-silico translate them and transform them into a scaffold energy hopping structure in order to design potent selective super-agonsist anti-peptide poly-mimic new superstructure which is explicitly elucidated. We also combined all existing methods for computational huper-structured drug design methodologies to induce catalysis of Ebola Virus EBOV NP and EBO16 peptides by inducing energetically targeted favorable hydrogen bonds, van der Waals, and electrostatic interactions to a high-energy reaction conserved motif-based transition state(s) and/or intermediate(s) of Ebola virus. In this present Research Scientific Project , for first time we developed a computational method for designing motif-like conserved residues and ligand binding virus proteins with two properties characteristic of naturally occurring binding sites in addition to specific energetically favorable interactions with our newly designed hyper-multi-target ligand. Here, in Biogenea we have in silico discovered a virion-attached pharmacophore cross-reacting synthetic EQHHRRTDN peptide mimetic ligand comprising potential therapeutic properties against Ebola virus using an in silico drug design structure peptide-sequence-based combinatorial analysis by a multi-objective cluster of algorithms.