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Research Articles

Proanthocyanidin B2 derived metabolites may be ligands for bile acid receptors S1PR2, PXR and CAR: an in silico approach

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 4249-4262 | Received 14 Mar 2023, Accepted 24 May 2023, Published online: 20 Jun 2023
 

Abstract

Bile acids (BAs) act as signaling molecules via their interactions with various nuclear (FXR, VDR, PXR and CAR) and G-protein coupled (TGR5, M3R, S1PR2) BA receptors. Stimulation of these BA receptors influences several processes, including inflammatory responses and glucose and xenobiotic metabolism. BA profiles and BA receptor activity are deregulated in cardiometabolic diseases; however, dietary polyphenols were shown to alter BA profile and signaling in association with improved metabolic phenotypes. We previously reported that supplementing mice with a proanthocyanidin (PAC)-rich grape polyphenol (GP) extract attenuated symptoms of glucose intolerance in association with changes to BA profiles, BA receptor gene expression, and/or downstream markers of BA receptor activity. Exact mechanisms by which polyphenols modulate BA signaling are not known, but some hypotheses include modulation of the BA profile via changes to gut bacteria, or alteration of ligand-availability via BA sequestration. Herein, we used an in silico approach to investigate putative binding affinities of proanthocyanidin B2 (PACB2) and PACB2 metabolites to nuclear and G-protein coupled BA receptors. Molecular docking and dynamics simulations revealed that certain PACB2 metabolites had stable binding affinities to S1PR2, PXR and CAR, comparable to that of known natural and synthetic BA ligands. These findings suggest PACB2 metabolites may be novel ligands of S1PR2, CAR, and PXR receptors.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Authors’ contributions

SHH, KMT, DER planned the study. SHH and KMT performed the molecular docking, molecular simulations, and wrote the original draft of the manuscript. SHH, KMT, EM, and DER conceptualized, wrote, and edited the final draft of the manuscript.

Disclosure statement

Diana E. Roopchand has equity in Nutrasorb. Nutrasorb has no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Additional information

Funding

We thank NIH/NCCIH for R01 AT010242 (DER) and F31 AT010981 (KMT) research support.

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