We have applied a combined computational procedure based on inverse and direct docking in order to identify putative protein targets of a panel of mycotoxins and xenobiotic compounds that can contaminate food and that are known to have several detrimental effects on human health. This procedure allowed us to identify a panel of human proteins as possible targets for aflatoxins, gliotoxin, ochratoxin A and deoxynivalenol. Steady-state fluorescence and microscale thermophoresis experiments allowed us to confirm the binding of some of these mycotoxins to acetylcholinesterase and X-linked neuroligin 4, two proteins involved in synapse activity and, particularly for the second protein, neuronal plasticity and development. Considering the possible involvement of X-linked neuroligin 4 in the etiopathogenesis of autism spectrum syndrome, this finding opens up a new avenue to explore the hypothetical role of these xenobiotic compounds in the onset of this pathology.
CITATION STYLE
Scafuri, B., Varriale, A., Facchiano, A., D’Auria, S., Raggi, M. E., & Marabotti, A. (2017). Binding of mycotoxins to proteins involved in neuronal plasticity: A combined in silico/wet investigation. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-15148-4
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