The Indonesian Biomedical Journal
Vol 17, No 5 (2025)

Inositol Hexakisphosphate (InsP₆) Induces Apoptosis via Caspase-Dependent Pathways: Molecular Docking Insights

Sandra, Ferry (Unknown)
Ranggaini, Dewi (Unknown)
Halim, Johni (Unknown)
Pakpahan, Alfred (Unknown)
Pratitis, Visi Endah (Unknown)
Lee, Kyung Hoon (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
29 Oct 2025

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Inositol hexakisphosphate (InsP₆) exhibits anticancer activity, especially by inducing intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic pathways. However, there is still no molecular docking evidence that directly examines InsP₆ interactions with either upstream or downstream apoptotic regulators. Therefore, the current study was conducted to investigate the molecular docking of InsP₆ to caspases as upstream/downstream apoptotic regulators.METHODS: Ligands including InsP₆, InsP₅, InsP₄, histone deacetylase inhibitor, and caspase inhibitors were retrieved from PubChem, while target proteins (histone, caspase-8, caspase-2, and caspase-3) were obtained from the Protein Data Bank. Ligand toxicity was predicted using ProTox-3.0, and physicochemical properties were analyzed with SwissADME. Ligand structures were energy-minimized using PyRx with the Universal Force Field, while proteins were prepared by removing water molecules and non-essential heteroatoms in BIOVIA Discovery Studio. Molecular docking was conducted using CB-Dock 2.0, with binding poses selected based on the lowest Vina score, and ligand–protein interactions were visualized in Discovery Studio.RESULTS: Molecular docking results showed that InsP₆ bound strongly to histone, caspase-8, caspase-2, and caspase-3 with affinities comparable to reference inhibitors, forming multiple hydrogen bonds with key active-site residues. InsP₆, InsP₅, and InsP₄ exhibited several similar binding sites to caspase-3, with only minor differences in binding affinity.CONCLUSION: InsP₆ shows strong binding to histone, caspase-8, caspase-2, and caspase-3 based on in silico results, supporting its role in inducing both extrinsic and intrinsic apoptotic pathways. Taken together, InsP₆ could be a potential inducer of apoptosis in cancer cells.KEYWORDS: cancer, apoptosis, InsP₆, InsP₅, InsP₄, caspase, in silico, molecular docking

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