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Simulation Reveals How a SARS-CoV-2 ‘Gate’ Opens to Allow COVID Infection

Simulation Reveals How a SARS-CoV-2 ‘Gate’ Opens to Allow COVID Infection

Despite more than a year and a half of research, there are still many unknowns about how the virus that causes COVID-19 infects human cells. A deeper understanding could lead to new treatment approaches.


Using supercomputer simulations, a team from the University of California San Diego, the University of Pittsburgh, The University of Texas at Austin and elsewhere, have discovered how glycans—molecules that make up a sugary residue around the edges of the spike protein—act as "gates" that open to allow SARS-CoV-2 entry into human cells.

A study describing the results and a stunningly detailed movie of the process were published August 19 in the journal Nature Chemistry. The computationally intensive simulations were first run at the San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego and later at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at UT Austin.

"We essentially figured out how the spike actually opens and infects," said Rommie Amaro, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry and a senior author of the new study. "We've unlocked an important secret of the spike in how it infects cells. Without this gate the virus basically is rendered incapable of infection."

Jason McLellan, an associate professor of molecular biosciences at UT Austin and his team created variants of the spike protein and tested to see how a lack of the glycan gate affected the RBD's ability to open.

"We showed that without this gate, the RBD of the spike protein can't take the conformation it needs to infect cells," McLellan said.

Amaro believes the research team's gate discovery opens potential avenues for new therapeutics to counter SARS-CoV-2 infection. If glycan gates could be pharmacologically locked in the closed position, then the virus is effectively prevented from opening to allow entry and infection.

The spike's coating of glycans helps deceive the human immune system since it comes across as nothing more than a sugary residue. Previous technologies that imaged these structures depicted glycans in static open or closed positions, which initially didn't draw much interest from scientists. Early in the pandemic, Amaro, a computational biophysical chemist, helped develop a detailed visualization of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein that efficiently latches onto our cell receptors. Supercomputing simulations then allowed the researchers to develop dynamic movies that revealed glycan gates activating from one position to another, offering an unprecedented piece of the infection story.

"We were actually able to watch the opening and closing," said Amaro. "That's one of the really cool things these simulations give you—the ability to see really detailed movies. When you watch them, you realize you're seeing something that we otherwise would have ignored. You look at just the closed structure, and then you look at the open structure, and it doesn't look like anything special. It's only because we captured the movie of the whole process that you actually see it doing its thing."

"Standard techniques would have required years to simulate this opening process, but with my lab's 'weighted ensemble' advanced simulation tools, we were able to capture the process in only 45 days," said Lillian Chong, co-senior author of the study at the University of Pittsburgh.

The computing power available at UC San Diego and UT Austin provided the researchers with atomic-level views of the spike protein receptor binding domain, or RBD, from more than 300 perspectives. The investigations revealed gating position "N343" as the linchpin that pries the RBD from the "down" to "up" position to allow access to the host cell's ACE2 receptor. The researchers describe the N343 glycan activation as similar to a "molecular crowbar" mechanism.

The study was led by Amarro, Chong, UC San Diego graduate student Terra Sztain and UC San Diego postdoctoral scholar Surl-Hee Ahn. Other authors include: Anthony Bogetti, Lorenzo Casalino, Jory Goldsmith, Evan Seitz, Ryan McCool, Fiona Kearns, Francisco Acosta-Reyes, Suvrajit Maji, Ghoncheh Mashayekhi, J. Andrew McCammon, Abbas Ourmazd, and Joachim Frank.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute of General Medical Science, the RCSA Research Corp., and UC San Diego's Moores Cancer Center.

This post was adapted from a press release by the University of California San Diego.

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Comments 1

 
Guest - Billy Hall on Thursday, 19 August 2021 20:12

Please find the key. After reading this article I think you guys are about to make history. Thank You for all the work you guys have put into this.

Please find the key. After reading this article I think you guys are about to make history. Thank You for all the work you guys have put into this.
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