Computer
model showing poly basic cleavage sites on the novel coronavirus' spike
protein.
Courtesy: Northwestern University.
Northwestern
University researchers have uncovered a new vulnerability in the novel
coronavirus' infamous spike protein—illuminating a relatively simple, potential
treatment pathway.
The spike
protein contains the virus' binding site, which adheres to host cells and
enables the virus to enter and infect the body. Using nanometer-level
simulations, the researchers discovered a positively charged site (known as the
polybasic cleavage site) located 10 nanometers from the actual binding site on
the spike protein. The positively charged site allows strong bonding between
the virus protein and the negatively charged human-cell receptors.
Leveraging
this discovery, the researchers designed a negatively charged molecule to bind
to the positively charged cleavage site. Blocking this site inhibits the virus
from bonding to the host cell.
"Our
work indicates that blocking this cleavage site may act as a viable
prophylactic treatment that decreases the virus' ability to infect
humans," said Northwestern's Monica Olvera de la Cruz, who led the work.
"Our results explain experimental studies showing that mutations of the SARS-CoV-2
spike protein affected the virus transmissibility."
The
research was published online last week in the journal ACS Nano.
Olvera de
la Cruz is the Lawyer Taylor Professor of Materials Science and Engineering in
Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering. Baofu Qiao, a research
assistant professor in Olvera de la Cruz's research group, is the paper's first
author.
Made up of
amino acids, SARS-CoV-2's polybasic cleavage sites have remained elusive since
the COVID-19 outbreak began. But previous research indicates that these
mysterious sites are essential for virulence and transmission. Olvera de la
Cruz and Qiao discovered that polybasic cleavage site is located 10 nanometers
from human cell receptors—a finding that provided unexpected insight.
"We
didn't expect to see electrostatic interactions at 10 nanometers," Qiao
said. "In physiological conditions, all electrostatic interactions no
longer occur at distances longer than 1 nanometer."
"The
function of the polybasic cleavage site has remained elusive," Olvera de
la Cruz said. "However, it appears to be cleaved by an enzyme (furin) that
is abundant in lungs, which suggests the cleavage site is crucial for virus
entry into human cells."
With this
new information, Olvera de la Cruz and Qiao next plan to work with Northwestern
chemists and pharmacologists to design a new drug that could bind to the spike
protein.