Aliarcobacter butzleri is an emerging foodborne and zoonotic pathogen, yet many of its encoded proteins remain functionally uncharacterized. This lack of annotation limits understanding of its molecular mechanisms and hampers the identification of novel therapeutic targets. In this study, we systematically performed functional annotation of essential hypothetical proteins from the BNI-3166 strain using an integrative-in-silico approach to uncover potential drug and vaccine candidates. 2,367 protein-coding sequences were retrieved from the RefSeq database and were identified 356 as hypothetical proteins. Using BLASTp, we screened these HPs against the Database of Essential Genes and the human proteome to identify essential non-homologous proteins, resulting in 20 ENH candidates. Functional annotation was performed using several domain-based databases, including Pfam, InterPro, SMART, and SUPERFAMILY. Subsequently, physicochemical properties were analyzed and predicted subcellular localization using PSORTb and CELLO. To assess druggability, the ChEMBL database was used. Virulence factors using VFDB, VICMpred, and VirulentPred 2.0 were also predicted. Gene Ontology annotations were generated via ARGOT2.5. Furthermore, we explored protein-protein interactions using STRING and predicted tertiary structures with AlphaFold3. Moreover, Ligand binding pockets were predicted using PrankWeb, and antigenicity of vaccine candidates was assessed using VaxiJen v2.0. We identified 20 essential non-homologous hypothetical proteins, of which 10 were confidently annotated based on conserved domain analysis. These proteins were classified as enzymes, binding proteins, transporters, regulatory proteins, and potential virulence factors. Among them, eight exhibited characteristics of promising drug targets, while two showed potential as vaccine candidates based on subcellular localization. Druggability analysis revealed that nine proteins had no similarity to known drug targets, suggesting novel therapeutic potential. Predicted 3D structures generated using AlphaFold3 yielded pTM scores ranging from 0.44 to 0.92, indicating acceptable to high modeling confidence. Ligand binding site analysis confirmed druggability in six candidates, and antigenicity screening identified one protein as a potential vaccine target. This study provides a computational framework for identifying functionally important proteins in A. butzleri BNI-3166 and highlights novel therapeutic candidates for experimental validation, offering new directions in drug and vaccine development against this underexplored pathogen.
Key words: Aliarcobacter butzleri, Drug Target Identification, Functional Annotation, Hypothetical Proteins, In Silico Analysis
Received: 08.07.2025; Accepted: 01.09.2025; Early view: 24.09.2025 Published: 10.01.2026
DOI: 10.62063/ecb-66
Citation: Paul, S., Barua, S., & Barua, J.D. (2026). In-silico functional annotation and structural characterization of hypothetical proteins from Aliarcobacter butzleri BNI-3166: Insights into novel virulence and drug targets. The European chemistry and biotechnology journal, 5, 22-39. https://doi.org/10.62063/ecb-66
The copyrights of the studies published in The European Chemistry and Biotechnology Journal (EUCHEMBIOJ) belong to their authors
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
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I'm not capable of directly accessing or scanning specific blockchain addresses or transactions in real-time. However, I can guide you on how to review or analyze a Bitcoin address and its activity.
Elena closed her laptop. The address remained on the ledger, pulsing every Tuesday at 3:13 AM UTC. A ghost in the machine. A man who refused to die.
According to data from BTCScan , the address shows a pattern of high-frequency, low-volume activity. Current Status (May 2026) Total Transactions Total Received 0.12548476 BTC Total Sent 0.12548476 BTC Final Balance Last Activity May 2, 2026
It wasn’t a known hacker wallet or a sanctioned exchange. The alert was for something stranger: Pattern Recognition Anomaly 77-B – a transaction rhythm mimicking human heartbeat.
: Every satoshi sent to or from this address is permanently recorded and verifiable by anyone with the transaction ID (TXID) . Bitcoin Address bc1qp6ejw8ptj9l9pkscmlf8fhhkrrjeawgpyjvtq8
She typed one final message into the OP_RETURN field: "KEEP BEATING, ARIS."
: The identity of the owner remains hidden unless linked to a real-world identity through a KYC-compliant exchange or other public disclosure.
She sent a test transaction to the address: a single satoshi (0.00000001 BTC) with a message: "WHO ARE YOU?"
The address you've provided, "bc1qp6ejw8ptj9l9pkscmlf8fhhkrrjeawgpyjvtq8", appears to be a Bitcoin address using the Bech32 format, which is a standard for Bitcoin addresses starting with "bc1".