these drugs, herbal medicine is also an option for
patients.
Indonesia has a wealth of herbs, one of which
is lemon (Citrus limon (Linn) Burm F.). One of the
compounds in lemon that is thought to be potential
as an antiplatelet is flavonoids. Based on studies that
have been conducted, lemon plants are known to
have activity as an anticoagulant and antiplatelet in
vitro/in vivo (Riaz et al., 2014). Flavonoids are one
type of antioxidant that can inhibit adhesion,
aggregation and platelet secretion (Retnaningsih et
al. 2007). The ability of flavonoids to inhibit platelet
aggregation is caused by the flavonoid inhibiting the
metabolism of arachidonic acid by cyclooxygenase
enzyme, thus reducing the amount of thromboxane
A2 (TXA2) production and platelet aggregate
production causing blood vessel blockage
(Middleton et al., 2000).
Cyclooxygenase (COX) is a functional enzyme
bound to the membrane acting to catalyze two
important stages in the formation of prostanoid,
cyclooxygenation, and peroxidation reaction. The
cyclooxygenation reaction stage is the stage at which
COX conducts a cyclization process and the addition
of two oxygen molecules to arachidonic acid to form
prostaglandin G2 (PGG2). The peroxidation stage is
the reduction stage of PGG2 into an unstable
endoperoxide compound called prostaglandin H2
(PGH2). There are two main isoforms of the
cyclooxygenase enzyme, cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-
1) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). COX-1 is
expressed continuously and has a function as a
regulator of homeostasis in the function of
protecting the gastric mucosa, maintaining platelet
integrity, and maintaining the function of renal
perfusion. COX-2 plays a role in pathologies such as
inflammation, pain, and cancer (Claria, 2003).
Molecular docking is a device that can be used to
study the interactions that occur from a molecular
complex. Molecular docking helps in studying drug
or ligand interactions with receptors or proteins.
Molecular docking is conducted by identifying the
corresponding active site of the receptor/protein,
obtaining the best geometry of the receptor ligand
and calculating the interaction energy of each
different ligand for designing a more effective
ligand. To perform molecular docking, the first thing
required is a three-dimensional structure of ligand
and receptor. Virtual screening is a computational
technique in the design of new computer-based
drugs (in silico) to identify the structures most likely
to bind to a targeted drug, usually a protein or
enzyme receptor (Mukesh and Rakesh, 2011).
2 MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1 Materials
The tool used in this research was hardware and
software. Hard performances were equipped with
AMD E1-2100 APU with Radeon ™ HD Graphics
CPU GHz processor, 2GB RAM, and Microsoft
Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit operating system, 24-
inch Hp® Monitor, and Bolt® modem for internet
access. The software programs were equipped with
the MGL Tools 1.5.6 Package consisting of
Autodock Vina, Autodock Tools, Pymol (DeLano
Scientific LLC.), Discovery Studio 4.5 Client, CLC
Drug Discovery Workbench 2.5, Chem office 2010,
Protein Data Bank (http://www.rcsb.org/pdb).
The material used was the 3D structure of the
platelet receptor that was downloaded from Protein
Data Bank which has formatted .pdb,i.e.
prostaglandin H2 synthase-1 (PDB ID: 1CQE) and
3D structure used was flavonoid derived compound
among others were eriocitrin, hesperidin,
neohesperidin, diosmin, rutin, luteolin, nobiletin,
sinensetin, and tangeritin (Molina et al., 2010).
2.2 Methods
Preparation of Prostaglandin H2 Synthase-1 (COX-
1) structure was conducted by downloading the
COX-1 receptor macromolecule from the Protein
Data Bank from http://www.rcsb.org/pdb formatted
from .pdb website to .pdb. Cavity must be
determined to find the residues in the receptor. The
cavity determination was performed using the
offline CLC Drug Discovery Workbench 2.5
software that was downloaded from
http://www.clcbio.com/products/clc-drug-discovery-
workbench/. Receptor macromolecules were
separated from solvents and ligands or non-standard
residues. The separation of macromolecules from
unnecessary molecules was done using the
Discovery Studio 4.0 program. The result of the
separation was saved in .pdb format. The design of
the ligand structure of the flavonoid derived
compound consists of eriocitrin, hesperidin,
neohesperidin, diosmin, rutin, luteolin, nobiletin,
sinensetin, and tangeritin were downloaded from the
PubChem site (http://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov./).
The docking file preparation was conducted by
using Autodock Tools that was optimized by setting
the number of action torsion and converting the
format to .pdbqt. While the receptor preparation was
being conducted by adding hydrogen polar, the grid