Whole-Genome Sequencing of Multidrug-ResistantLocal Isolate and Molecular Dynamics Simulation Studies of a Modified KR-12 Analog Targeting AbaQ and BfmR. | Pepdox
Whole-Genome Sequencing of Multidrug-ResistantLocal Isolate and Molecular Dynamics Simulation Studies of a Modified KR-12 Analog Targeting AbaQ and BfmR.
International journal of molecular sciences2026PMID: 41977294
() represents a major threat because of its multidrug resistance, achieved through its ability to control virulence, and its mechanisms of drug efflux resistance. In this study, we used a combined experimental-computational approach to create and evaluate antimicrobial peptides that targeted the two essential pathogenic proteins, BfmR and AbaQ. The genomic analysis of a clinical isolate showed an extensive resistome and virulence profile, which matched high-risk global lineages. This study conducted molecular docking of an experimental AMP (cathelicidin KR-12 screened from the literature) and a rationally designed synthetic AMP (modified KR-12 analog) with pathogenic proteins, followed by 200 ns molecular dynamics simulations to evaluate both the binding stability and inhibitory potential of the compounds. The disk diffusion assay and microdilution assay were performed against. The study used comparative trajectory analyses, including RMSD, RMSF, radius of gyration, solvent-accessible surface area, principal component analysis, and MM-PBSA free energy calculations, to show that the synthetic AMP created stable electrostatic and hydrogen-bond networks, which caused conformational locking, and reached lower energy states than the experimental peptide. The synthetic AMP showed significant inhibition in validation in vitro. Contrastingly, the experimental AMP had transient interactions and no specificity. The study demonstrates that rationally designed AMPs have therapeutic potential, while the results create a reliable in silico framework to combat multidrug-resistant.