A Multi-Target Approach for Identifying Natural Inhibitors of Metabolic Syndrome Proteins (AMPK, PPAR-Γ, IRS-1) Using Molecular Docking and in-Silico Screening

Authors

Dearsly, Emmanuel Markus

Department of Biosciences, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, Salem University, Kogi State, Nigeria (Nigeria)

Eze, Kingsley Chijioke

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Calabar Nigeria/Aquatic Bioresources Training Center Adiabo: National Bioresources Development Agency (NABDA) (Nigeria)

Oshatuyi Olukayode

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Calabar Nigeria (Nigeria)

Odiba John chubiojo

Department of Biosciences, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, Salem University, Kogi State, Nigeria (Nigeria)

Dada, Emmanuel Damilo

Department of Biosciences, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, Salem University, Kogi State, Nigeria (Nigeria)

Janet Peter

Department of Biosciences, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, Salem University, Kogi State, Nigeria (Nigeria)

Obasi Nnenna Patrick

Aquatic Bioresources Training Center Adiabo: National Bioresources Development Agency (NABDA) (Nigeria)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.11060086

Subject Category: Pharmacology

Volume/Issue: 11/6 | Page No: 1040-1050

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-01

Accepted: 2026-02-06

Published: 2026-06-24

Abstract

Metabolic syndrome is a complex cardiometabolic disorder driven by coordinated dysregulation of energy balance, insulin signaling, and lipid metabolism. Central regulatory proteins—including AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPAR-γ), and insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) - represent interconnected molecular nodes within this network, yet current therapeutic strategies largely rely on single-target modulation. Natural products offer structurally diverse scaffolds capable of engaging multiple targets, providing a rational basis for multi-target drug discovery. In this study, a systematic in silico multi-target screening strategy was employed to evaluate phytochemicals derived from Hyptis verticillata against AMPK, PPAR-γ, and IRS-1. Molecular docking was performed using AutoDock Vina against crystallographic structures of AMPK and PPAR-γ, while a homology-modeled structure of IRS-1 was utilized. Binding affinities and protein–ligand interaction profiles were analyzed, followed by in silico assessment of drug-likeness and pharmacokinetic properties using SwissADME. Docking analyses revealed binding energies ranging from −3.8 to −8.6 kcal/mol across the targets. Dehydropodophyllotoxin, oleanolic acid, cadina-4,10(15)-dien-3-one, aromadendr-1(10)-en-9-one, and squalene consistently exhibited favorable binding across multiple proteins. Interaction mapping indicated that ligand stabilization was dominated by hydrophobic and π-alkyl interactions within functionally relevant binding regions. Pharmacokinetic profiling suggested acceptable oral drug-likeness for several top-ranking compounds, particularly oleanolic acid. Collectively, these findings identify H. verticillata phytochemicals as promising multi-target molecular scaffolds relevant to metabolic regulation. While the results reflect predicted molecular recognition rather than functional modulation, this work establishes a robust computational framework for prioritizing natural compounds for experimental validation and supports the utility of multi-target in silico approaches in metabolic syndrome drug discovery.

Keywords

Metabolic syndrome; Multi-target drug discovery; Molecular docking; AMPK; PPAR-γ; IRS-1; Phytochemicals; ADMET profiling

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References

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