Back to Search Start Over

SARS-CoV-2 papain-like protease PLpro in complex with natural compounds reveal allosteric sites for antiviral drug design

Authors :
Arwen R. Pearson
N. Ullah
Christian Betzel
M. Groessler
M. Galchenkova
Huijong Han
Winfried Hinrichs
Sebastian Guenther
Philipp Middendorf
Sven Falke
Hévila Brognaro
Markus Perbandt
L. Brings
Janina Sprenger
J. Lieske
Angelica Luana C Barra
Rafael Rahal Guaragna Machado
Kristina Lorenzen
Faisal H. M. Koua
Carsten Wrenger
Thomas J. Lane
Vasundara Srinivasan
Edmarci Elisa de Souza
Bruno Alves Franca
Patrick Y. A. Reinke
Alke Meents
J. Hakanpaeae
Prince Rajaiah Prabhu
M. Domaracky
Edison Luiz Durigon
Oleksandr Yefanov
F. Trost
Dušan Turk
H. Andaleeb
Danielle Bruna Leal Oliveira
Markus Wolf
M. Wang
Helen M. Ginn
Robin Schubert
W. Ewert
M. Schwinzer
N. Werner
C. Schmidt
Sofiane Saouane
Henry N. Chapman
Erika Donizette Candido
Luca Gelisio
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 papain-like protease (PLpro) covers multiple functions. Beside the cysteine-protease activity, PLpro has the additional and vital function of removing ubiquitin and ISG15 (Interferon-stimulated gene 15) from host-cell proteins to aid coronaviruses in evading the host’s innate immune responses. We established a high-throughput X-ray screening to identify inhibitors by elucidating the native PLpro structure refined to 1.42 Å and performing co-crystallization utilizing a diverse library of selected natural compounds. We identified three phenolic compounds as potential inhibitors. Crystal structures of PLpro inhibitor complexes, obtained to resolutions between 1.7-1.9 Å, show that all three compounds bind at the ISG15/Ub-S2 allosteric binding site, preventing the essential ISG15-PLpro molecular interactions. All compounds demonstrate clear inhibition in a deISGylation assay, two exhibit distinct antiviral activity and one inhibited a cytopathic effect in a non-cytotoxic concentration range. These results highlight the druggability of the rarely explored ISG15/Ub-S2 PLpro allosteric binding site to identify new and effective antiviral compounds. Importantly, in the context of increasing PLpro mutations in the evolving new variants of SARS-CoV-2, the natural compounds we identified may also reinstate the antiviral immune response processes of the host that are down-regulated in COVID-19 infections.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........964928cd6675bbfb565ecc660007aa33
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.11.17.468943