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Exploring the interaction of tepotinib with calf thymus DNA using molecular dynamics simulation and multispectroscopic techniques.

In recent times, there has been a surge in the discovery of drugs that directly interact with DNA, influencing gene expression. As a result, understanding how biomolecules interact with DNA has become a major area of research. One such drug is Tepotinib (TPT), an FDA-approved anti-cancer medication known as a MET tyrosine kinase inhibitor, used in chemotherapy for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with MET exon 14 skipping alterations. In our study, we adopted both biophysical and in-silico methods to investigate the binding relationship of TPT and ctDNA. The absorption spectra of ctDNA exhibited a hypochromic effect when titrated with TPT and the binding constant of TPT-ctDNA complex was calculated, Ka = 9.91 × 104 M-1 . By computing bimolecular enhancement constant (KB ) and thermodynamic enhancement constant (KD ) in fluorometric investigations, it was found that the fluorescence enhancement is a result of a static process involving the ctDNA-TPT complex formation in the ground state, as opposed to a dynamic process. The displacement assay results further supported this finding, showing that TPT exhibits a binding preference for minor groove of ct-DNA and was also demonstrated by KI quenching and CD spectroscopy. The molecular docking and molecular dynamic simulations validated TPT's groove binding nature and binding pattern with ctDNA, respectively. Thus, the results of our present investigation offer valuable insights into the interaction between TPT and ctDNA. It is evident that TPT, as an anti-cancer medication, binds to the minor groove of ctDNA.

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