Shigella flexneri
is a facultative intracellular pathogen that causes bacillary dysentery in humans. Infection with
S. flexneri
can result in more than a million deaths yearly and most of the victims are children in developing countries. Therefore, identifying novel and unique drug targets against this pathogen is instrumental to overcome the problem of drug resistance to the antibiotics given to patients as the current therapy. In this study, a comparative analysis of the metabolic pathways of the host and pathogen was performed to identify this pathogen’s essential enzymes for the survival and propose potential drug targets. First, we extracted the metabolic pathways of the host,
Homo sapiens
, and pathogen,
S.
flexneri, from the KEGG database. Next, we manually compared the pathways to categorize those that were exclusive to the pathogen. Further, all enzymes for the 26 unique pathways were extracted and submitted to the Geptop tool to identify essential enzymes for further screening in determining the feasibility of the therapeutic targets that were predicted and analyzed using PPI network analysis, subcellular localization, druggability testing, gene ontology and epitope mapping. Using these various criteria, we narrowed it down to prioritize 5 novel drug targets against
S. flexneri
and one vaccine drug targets against all strains of
Shigella
. Hence, we suggest the identified enzymes as the best putative drug targets for the effective treatment of
S. flexneri
.
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