2.2. Molecular Docking
Prior to the screening campaign, the reliability of the docking protocol was assessed through two complementary tests. First, the co-crystallized ligand AR-C124798 (AT2) was extracted from the iNOS structure (PDB: 3E7G) and redocked into the receptor under blind docking conditions. Among the ten generated poses, one reproduced the crystallographic binding mode with a heavy-atom RMSD of 0.456 Å, well below the 2.0 Å threshold considered indicative of successful pose prediction [
32] (
Figure 1). The top-ranked pose (model 1, −8.3 kcal/mol) was located at an alternative site on the protein surface, which is expected under a blind docking protocol with a large search volume (>27,000 Å
3) that intentionally explores the entire receptor without spatial bias. The successful reproduction of the native binding mode confirms that AutoDock Vina can identify the correct pose within the ensemble of predicted conformations for this target.
Second, quercetin was docked 100 independent times against each target to evaluate scoring reproducibility. For iNOS, the mean binding energy was −9.50 ± 0.05 kcal/mol, while for NF-
B the mean was −7.91 ± 0.22 kcal/mol. The low standard deviations indicate high scoring reproducibility for both targets, with the single-run values reported in
Table 4 (−9.4 and −7.8 kcal/mol, respectively) falling within the 100-run distributions.
Molecular docking simulations were performed to evaluate the binding affinity of ENCNs and ENCs against iNOS and NF-
B. Quercetin was included as a reference compound due to its well-documented inhibitory activity against both targets [
25]. The binding energies for all compounds are summarized in
Table 4.
Docking results against iNOS revealed that ENCNs generally exhibited more favorable binding energies compared to erinacines. Among ENCNs, ENCN E showed the lowest binding energy (−11.5 kcal/mol), followed by ENCN A (−11.3 kcal/mol), ENCN F (−11.2 kcal/mol), ENCN Q (−10.3 kcal/mol), and ENCN L (−10.0 kcal/mol). For ENCs, ENC H displayed the most favorable binding energy (−10.0 kcal/mol), followed by ENC G (−9.7 kcal/mol), ENC S (−9.4 kcal/mol), ENC E (−9.2 kcal/mol), and ENC C (−9.1 kcal/mol).
Regarding NF-B, overall lower binding affinities were observed compared to iNOS, consistent with the different binding site characteristics of each target. ENC D exhibited the most favorable binding energy (−8.5 kcal/mol), followed by ENC A (−7.7 kcal/mol) and ENC U (−7.5 kcal/mol). Among erinacines, ENC S showed the lowest binding energy (−7.8 kcal/mol), followed by Erinacine J (−7.5 kcal/mol) and Erinacines F, G, and H (all −7.4 kcal/mol).
Notably, certain compounds demonstrated favorable binding to both targets, suggesting potential dual-target activity. ENCN A and Q, along with ENC S, H, and G, exhibited competitive binding energies against both iNOS and NF-B, making them promising candidates for further investigation. Based on these results, compounds with the most favorable binding energies were selected for molecular dynamics simulations to evaluate the stability of the protein–ligand complexes.
2.3. Molecular Docking Screening
Docking scores for the complete panel of ENCNs and ENCs against iNOS (PDB: 3E7G) and NF-
B (PDB: 8TKL) are compiled in
Table 4. For both targets, the most favorable candidates within each compound class were highlighted using a rank-based cutoff (top five binding energies per target and class), providing a standardized criterion for prioritization.
For iNOS, ENCNs displayed a broader and overall more favorable affinity profile than ENCs, including multiple ligands with binding energies below
kcal/mol (
Table 4). The highest-ranked ENCNs were ENCN E, A, F, Q, and L, whereas the top-scoring ENCs were ENC H, G, S, E, and C. In contrast, docking against NF-
B yielded less favorable energies and a narrower dispersion, consistent with reduced energetic separation among candidates under the same scoring framework. The highest-ranked ENCNs for NF-
B were D, A, U, I, and Q, while the top-ranked ENCs were S and J, followed by a tie at
kcal/mol (F, G, and H), all of which are indicated in
Table 4.
Across both targets, a subset of compounds maintained competitive scores in iNOS and NF-
B, supporting their prioritization as potentially dual-relevant candidates within the limitations of docking-based ranking. Notably, ENCNs A and Q and ENCs S, H, and G consistently appeared among the best-scoring ligands across the two receptors (
Table 4), and were therefore carried forward to the subsequent stages of the study.
2.4. Protein–Ligand Interaction Analysis
To complement the binding energy analysis, protein–ligand interactions were characterized for the top-ranked compounds and the reference compound quercetin against both targets. The interacting residues identified from the docked complexes are described below for each target, while the quantitative per-residue energy contributions derived from MM-PBSA decomposition over the MD trajectories are presented as heatmaps in
Figure 2 and
Figure 3.
For iNOS, the reference compound quercetin interacted with Trp194, Gly202, Leu209, Phe369, Trp372, and Tyr489, establishing a baseline interaction profile for comparison. Among ENCNs, Glu377 emerged as the most frequently contacted residue, being involved in interactions with four of the five top-ranked compounds (ENCNs E, F, L, and Q). Notably, Trp194 and Phe369—residues also contacted by quercetin—were recurrently observed in complexes with ENCNs A, L, and Q, suggesting a shared binding mode with the reference compound. ENCN A additionally contacted Leu209, another quercetin-interacting residue. Importantly, ENCN F interacted with Arg381, a residue previously identified as critical for iNOS inhibition [
25].
Regarding erinacines, the interaction profile was characterized by consistent contacts with Trp194, Cys200, and Phe369, observed in Erinacines C, E, and H. These compounds shared two key residues (Trp194 and Phe369) with quercetin, indicating similar anchoring points within the binding cavity. Erinacine H also interacted with Gly202 and displayed contacts in the vicinity of Tyr489, mirroring the quercetin interaction pattern. Trp463 was a recurrent interacting residue among erinacines, present in complexes with Erinacines E, G, and S. Notably, Gln263, a key residue for iNOS activity [
25], was identified in complexes with Erinacines C and S.
For NF-B, quercetin established interactions with Val58, Tyr57, Pro62, Gly61, Ser63, His64, Val112, Gly113, and Leu140. This interaction profile served as a reference for evaluating the binding characteristics of ENCNs and ENCs.
Among ENCNs, Val112 was the most frequently observed residue, interacting with ENCNs A, I, and Q—matching one of the key quercetin contacts. Leu140, another quercetin-interacting residue, was present in complexes with ENCNs A and Q. ENCN Q exhibited the highest degree of overlap with quercetin, sharing four interacting residues (Val58, Val112, Leu140, and proximity to Ser110/Ser63). ENCNs A and I also contacted Pro62 and His64, respectively, further supporting a quercetin-like binding mode. ENCN D displayed a distinct interaction pattern, contacting Arg54, Gly66, and Asn136, suggesting an alternative binding site.
The erinacines exhibited a highly conserved interaction profile with NF-B. Remarkably, Val58, Ser110, Asp118, and Leu140 were consistently observed in complexes with Erinacines G, J, and S, with Val58 and Leu140 being shared with quercetin. Erinacines F and H showed an alternative binding pattern, interacting with residues including His64 and Pro62 (in the case of Erinacine H vicinity), which partially overlap with the quercetin interaction profile.
The interaction analysis revealed that certain compounds share common binding residues with quercetin across both targets. ENCNs A and Q, which exhibited favorable binding energies against both iNOS and NF-
B (
Table 4), displayed substantial overlap with the quercetin interaction profile: sharing Trp194, Phe369, Val112, and Leu140. Similarly, ENC H showed the highest similarity to quercetin for iNOS, sharing five interacting residues (Trp194, Gly202, Phe369, Trp372, Tyr489), while ENCs G, J, and S demonstrated quercetin-like interactions with NF-
B through Val58 and Leu140 contacts. These findings support the potential of these compounds as dual-target ligands for neuroinflammatory pathways, with binding properties comparable to those of the established reference compound.
The per-residue energy decomposition analysis (
Figure 2 and
Figure 3) provided a quantitative complement to the docking-based contact profiles described above. For iNOS, quercetin displayed the most extensive energy-decomposition profile with 15 residues contributing
kcal/mol, anchored by strong interactions at Glu377 (−2.95 kcal/mol; electrostatic-driven), Phe369 (−2.58 kcal/mol; van der Waals-driven), and Trp372 (−2.15 kcal/mol). Quercetin was the only compound to establish favorable contributions at both Glu377 and Gln263 (−1.89 kcal/mol), two key catalytic residues [
25]; however, given its elevated ligand RMSD (1.870 nm;
Table 5), these values predominantly reflect the initial bound phase prior to ligand displacement rather than sustained pocket occupancy. Among the test compounds, ENC S (7 strong residues) and ENCN L (10 strong residues) displayed the richest profiles, sharing five residues with quercetin (Arg199, Cys200, Val352, Met355, and Phe369) that define a conserved recognition sub-site within the oxygenase domain. Notably, both showed unfavorable contributions at Glu377 (ENC S: +0.78; ENCN L: +1.61 kcal/mol), indicating a binding mode that does not engage the same charge-complementarity exploited by quercetin at this position. For NF-
B, quercetin exhibited 11 strong contacts—predominantly van der Waals-driven—anchored by Pro62 (−2.20 kcal/mol) and Val112 (−1.85 kcal/mol). ENCN Q closely replicated this profile, sharing 7 of the 11 reference residues and exceeding quercetin at Pro62 (−2.64 kcal/mol). In contrast, stable erinacine complexes (ENCs G, J, and S) engaged a distinct sub-region (Cys116–Glu117–Asp118–Gly119) with only partial overlap with the quercetin contact map, consistent with an alternative recognition surface on the p50 homodimer.
To illustrate the spatial arrangement of these interactions, representative MD snapshots of the top-performing complexes were visualized in three dimensions (
Figure 4). For iNOS (
Figure 4A–C), ENCN L occupies the enclosed active-site gorge in close contact with the conserved sub-site residues Cys200, Val352, Phe369, and Met355, with Glu377 positioned at the periphery of the binding cavity—consistent with the unfavorable electrostatic contribution observed in the decomposition analysis. ENC S adopts a similar orientation within the same gorge region, engaging Arg199, Cys200, and Phe369, while Trp463 provides additional van der Waals stabilization at the cavity entrance. Quercetin, despite its smaller molecular size, penetrates deeper into the cavity, establishing direct contacts with both Glu377 and Trp372 through its hydroxyl-rich scaffold, which explains its broader per-residue interaction footprint (
Figure 4C). For NF-
B (
Figure 4D–F), quercetin binds at the solvent-exposed surface groove anchored by Pro62, Ser63, Val112, and Leu140, with a hydrogen bond network visible between the catechol moiety and surrounding polar residues. ENCN Q occupies a closely overlapping region, consistent with its high degree of residue sharing (7 of 11) with the quercetin profile. ENC S, in contrast, sits in an adjacent pocket engaging Asp118, Ser110, Leu140, and Val58, visually confirming the alternative recognition sub-region identified by the decomposition heatmaps. Together, these three-dimensional representations corroborate the quantitative decomposition data and illustrate the distinct binding geometries adopted by each compound class within each target.
2.5. Molecular Dynamics Simulations
To validate the molecular docking predictions and evaluate the dynamic stability of protein–ligand complexes, 100 ns MD simulations were conducted for the top five compounds from each chemical class (ENCs and ENCNs) with both target proteins. Quercetin was included as a reference compound given its well-documented iNOS inhibitory activity. The root mean square deviation (RMSD) of ligand atomic positions relative to the initial docked conformation was monitored throughout each trajectory, with post-equilibration values (after 10 ns) used for quantitative comparisons. In addition, protein backbone RMSD, ligand–protein minimum distance, and C
root-mean-square fluctuation (RMSF) were computed to assess protein structural integrity, confirm ligand retention within the binding site, and identify regions of enhanced flexibility, respectively.
Table 5 summarizes the ligand RMSD, backbone RMSD, and minimum distance statistics for all simulated complexes, including negative controls.
The RMSD trajectories revealed distinct stability patterns that varied considerably depending on both the compound class and the target protein (
Figure 5). For iNOS complexes, ENCN L exhibited the lowest RMSD values among all tested compounds (0.185 ± 0.035 nm), maintaining exceptional positional stability throughout the entire 100 ns simulation. This value was aproximately 10-fold lower than that observed for the reference compound quercetin (1.870 ± 0.171 nm). ENC S also demonstrated remarkable stability with iNOS, showing RMSD values of 0.573 ± 0.111 nm, which represents a 3-fold improvement compared to quercetin. ENC C displayed moderate stability with values (1.790 ± 0.315 nm) comparable to the reference compound.
The remaining ENCNs tested with iNOS showed variable behavior. ENCN A maintained relatively stable binding (2.096 ± 0.134 nm) with low fluctuation, while ENCN F exhibited an interesting trajectory pattern characterized by stable binding during the first 80 ns followed by a marked RMSD increase, suggesting a potential late-stage unbinding event. ENCNs E and Q displayed high RMSD values (4.112 and 5.334 nm, respectively), indicating poor retention within the iNOS binding site. Among ENCs, compounds H and E showed the highest instability with iNOS, with RMSD values exceeding 5 nm throughout most of the simulation.
The NF-
B simulations revealed a striking class-dependent stability pattern. All five tested ENCs formed stable complexes with RMSD values below 1.2 nm, whereas four of the five tested ENCNs exhibited high instability with values exceeding 3.5 nm (
Figure 5C,D). ENCs G and J demonstrated the highest stability with NF-
B (0.345 ± 0.152 nm and 0.359 ± 0.087 nm, respectively), surpasing even the reference compound quercetin (0.753 ± 0.176 nm). ENC S maintained favorable stability (0.823 ± 0.286 nm), while ENCs F and H showed slightly higher but still acceptable RMSD values (1.078 and 1.165 nm, respectively). Among ENCNs, only ENCN Q formed a stable complex with NF-
B (1.313 ± 0.267 nm), representing the sole member of this class to maintain consistent binding throughout the simulation. The remaining ENCNs (A, U, I, and D) displayed pronounced instability characterized by RMSD values ranging from 3.8 to 4.7 nm and high standard deviations (1.5–2.6 nm), indicating significant ligand displacement and conformational fluctuations within the binding site.
The reference compound quercetin exhibited moderate stability with both targets. For iNOS, quercetin showed RMSD values of 1.870 ± 0.171 nm, positioning it in the middle range among all tested compounds. With NF-
B, quercetin demonstrated better stability (0.753 ± 0.176 nm), though it was outperformed by several erinacines. The RMSD trajectory of quercetin with both proteins remained relatively constant after initial equilibration, without major unbinding events (
Figure 6).
To distinguish ligand repositioning from true dissociation, the minimum distance between the ligand and the nearest protein atom was monitored throughout each trajectory (
Table 5). For iNOS, the minimum distance analysis revealed that the majority of compounds with elevated ligand RMSD values remained in contact with the protein surface (minimum distance < 0.25 nm), indicating relocation to alternative surface sites rather than complete unbinding. This was the case for ENCs C, E, G, and H, as well as ENCNs A and E, all of which maintained close protein contact despite ligand RMSD values ranging from 1.8 to 6.0 nm. Only ENCNs F and Q exhibited minimum distances exceeding 0.5 nm with high standard deviations (0.551 ± 0.734 and 0.582 ± 0.819 nm, respectively), consistent with transient dissociation events. The reference compound quercetin maintained a minimum distance of 0.219 ± 0.032 nm with iNOS, confirming persistent protein contact despite its elevated ligand RMSD. For NF-
B, the minimum distance analysis cleanly discriminated retained from dissociated complexes: all ENCs and ENCN Q maintained distances below 0.21 nm, whereas ENCNs A, D, I, and U showed mean minimum distances exceeding 1.0 nm with standard deviations above 1.0 nm, confirming complete and repeated ligand dissociation during the simulations.
Protein backbone RMSD analysis (
Table 5;
Figure 7) revealed target-dependent structural behavior. For iNOS, all complexes exhibited backbone RMSD values between 0.186 and 0.311 nm, indicating that the protein fold was well preserved throughout the simulations regardless of ligand behavior. The only exception was quercetin-iNOS, which displayed a notably higher backbone RMSD (0.564 ± 0.090 nm), suggesting that ligand repositioning in this complex was accompanied by local structural perturbation. For NF-
B, the backbone displayed inherently higher flexibility, consistent with the dimeric architecture of the p50 homodimer. Using quercetin as a reference (0.640 ± 0.134 nm), complexes with backbone RMSD values at or below this threshold included ENCNs I and Q, as well as ENCs F, H, and J. Complexes with substantially elevated backbone RMSD (ENCN A: 1.374 nm; ENC S: 1.075 nm) suggest that certain ligands may induce conformational perturbation in the NF-
B homodimer.
To evaluate dual-target potential, compounds that were simulated with both proteins were compared using a combined stability score calculated as the sum of post-equilibration RMSD values for each target (
Table 6). Among the five compounds with dual-target data, ENC S exhibited the most favorable combined profile with a total score of 1.396 nm, representing a 47% improvement over quercetin (2.624 nm). ENC G showed comparable overall stability to quercetin (2.778 nm vs. 2.624 nm), though with an asymmetric distribution favoring NF-
B binding. The remaining compounds (ENCN A, ENC H, and ENCN Q) displayed combined scores exceeding 5.8 nm, primarily due to instability with one of the two targets.
The RMSF profiles (
Figure 5, right column;
Figure 6B) provided complementary information on protein flexibility. For iNOS, all complexes displayed a conserved flexibility pattern with peaks around residues 100–120 and the C-terminal region (>490), corresponding to exposed loop regions. The core catalytic domain (residues 200–400) remained rigid across all simulations, indicating that ligand binding or dissociation did not perturb the overall protein fold. For NF-
B, the RMSF profiles showed higher baseline fluctuations (0.3–0.5 nm) consistent with the inherent flexibility of the dimeric structure, with pronounced peaks in the C-terminal region (residues 280–340). Notably, the ENC S–NF-
B complex exhibited the highest RMSF amplitudes among the stable erinacine complexes, particularly in the C-terminal domain, which correlates with its elevated backbone RMSD (1.075 nm) and may reflect ligand-induced conformational rearrangement.
2.6. Binding Free Energy Calculations
To complement the molecular docking predictions and MD stability analysis, binding free energies were calculated using the MM-PBSA method for all simulated protein–ligand complexes. This approach provides a more rigorous thermodynamic assessment of binding affinity by accounting for solvation effects and entropic contributions.
Table 7 summarizes the calculated binding free energies (
) for both target proteins, reported as mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) across 1000 frames extracted from the equilibrated trajectory (10–100 ns).
For iNOS, the MM-PBSA calculations revealed that ENC S exhibited the most favorable binding free energy (−24.31 kcal/mol), followed by ENCN L (−21.90 kcal/mol). Both compounds demonstrated substantially stronger binding affinities than the reference compound quercetin (−11.01 kcal/mol), with improvements of 13.30 and 10.89 kcal/mol, respectively. ENC G also showed notable affinity (−14.61 kcal/mol), approximately 3.6 kcal/mol more favorable than quercetin. Among the remaining compounds, ENCNs E and A displayed binding energies comparable to or slightly better than quercetin, while ENCs C and H, along with ENCNs Q and F, showed weaker binding affinities ranging from −7.66 to −9.83 kcal/mol.
The binding free energy results for NF-B showed a different pattern. ENCN Q emerged as the strongest binder with of −24.07 kcal/mol, surpassing the reference compound quercetin (−20.52 kcal/mol) by 3.55 kcal/mol. ENC G exhibited comparable affinity to quercetin (−20.38 vs. −20.52 kcal/mol), while ENCs J and H demonstrated moderately strong binding (−18.53 and −15.43 kcal/mol, respectively). Notably, the remaining ENCNs (A, U, I, and D) displayed substantially weaker binding affinities ranging from −2.32 to −7.35 kcal/mol, which correlates with the high RMSD values and complex instability observed during MD simulations for these compounds.
The MM-PBSA results showed high correlation with the MD stability data for most compounds. For iNOS, ENCN L, which exhibited the lowest RMSD values during simulation (0.185 nm), also demonstrated the second-strongest binding affinity. Similarly, ENC S showed both excellent complex stability (RMSD = 0.573 nm) and the highest binding affinity. For NF-B, the ENCs that maintained stable complexes during MD (G, J, S, H, F) all exhibited favorable binding energies between −13.52 and −20.38 kcal/mol, while the unstable ENCNs (A, U, I, D) showed correspondingly weak binding affinities.
From a dual-target perspective, ENC S demonstrated strong binding to iNOS (−24.31 kcal/mol) with moderate affinity for NF-B (−14.24 kcal/mol). ENC G showed a more balanced profile with good binding to both targets (−14.61 and −20.38 kcal/mol for iNOS and NF-B, respectively). Among compounds evaluated with both targets, ENC H exhibited consistent moderate binding (−9.71 and −15.43 kcal/mol), while ENCN Q showed an interesting asymmetric profile with weak iNOS binding (−7.81 kcal/mol) but the strongest NF-B affinity (−24.07 kcal/mol) among all tested compounds.
To assess whether the docking-based selection effectively discriminates favorable from unfavorable binders, five compounds with the lowest docking scores were subjected to the full MD/MM-PBSA pipeline as negative controls (
Table 7). For NF-
B, the three negative controls (ENCs D and Q; ENCN N) yielded binding free energies between −5.28 and −9.79 kcal/mol, substantially weaker than all top-ranked ENCs (−13.52 to −20.38 kcal/mol) and the quercetin reference (−20.52 kcal/mol), confirming the discriminative capacity of the docking ranking for this target. For iNOS, however, the two negative controls yielded unexpectedly favorable binding free energies: ENCN R (−34.24 ± 0.13 kcal/mol) and ENC D (−24.67 ± 0.19 kcal/mol), both exceeding the top-ranked candidate ENC S (−24.31 kcal/mol). These compounds also maintained close protein contact throughout the simulations (minimum distance < 0.19 nm;
Table 5). This result indicates that for iNOS, the docking scoring function did not reliably predict MM-PBSA binding free energies, and that the blind docking protocol—which explores the entire protein surface—may place low-scoring ligands at sites that become energetically favorable during MD relaxation. This observation underscores a recognized limitation of docking-based ranking and supports the use of MD/MM-PBSA as an essential refinement step in computational screening workflows.