Allosteric Control of Structural Mimicry and Mutational
Escape in the SARS-CoV‑2 Spike Protein Complexes with the ACE2
Decoys and Miniprotein Inhibitors: A Network-Based Approach for Mutational
Profiling of Binding and Signaling
posted on 2021-09-22, 21:30authored byGennady M. Verkhivker, Steve Agajanian, Deniz Yasar Oztas, Grace Gupta
We developed a computational framework
for comprehensive and rapid
mutational scanning of binding energetics and residue interaction
networks in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein complexes. Using this approach,
we integrated atomistic simulations and conformational landscaping
of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein complexes with ensemble-based mutational
screening and network modeling to characterize mechanisms of structure–functional
mimicry and resilience toward mutational escape by the ACE2 protein
decoy and de novo designed miniprotein inhibitors. A detailed analysis
of structural plasticity of the SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins obtained
from atomistic simulations of conformational landscapes and sequence-based
profiling of the disorder propensities revealed the intrinsically
flexible regions that harbor key functional sites targeted by circulating
variants. The conservation of collective dynamics in the SARS-CoV-2
spike protein complexes showed that mutational escape positions are
important for modulation of functional motions and that mutational
changes in these sites can alter allosteric interaction networks.
Through mutational profiling of binding and allosteric propensities
in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein complexes, we identified the key binding
and regulatory hotspots that collectively determine functional response
and resilience of miniproteins to mutational variants. The results
suggest that binding affinities and allosteric signatures of the SARS-CoV-2
complexes can be determined by dynamic crosstalk between structurally
stable regulatory centers and conformationally adaptable allosteric
hotspots that collectively control the resilience toward mutational
escape. This may underlie a mechanism in which moderate perturbations
in the mutational escape positions can induce global allosteric changes
and alter functional protein response by modulating signaling in the
residue interaction networks.