International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2022)

Nucleoside Analogs and Perylene Derivatives Modulate Phase Separation of SARS-CoV-2 N Protein and Genomic RNA In Vitro

  • Julia Svetlova,
  • Ekaterina Knizhnik,
  • Valentin Manuvera,
  • Vyacheslav Severov,
  • Dmitriy Shirokov,
  • Ekaterina Grafskaia,
  • Pavel Bobrovsky,
  • Elena Matyugina,
  • Anastasia Khandazhinskaya,
  • Liubov Kozlovskaya,
  • Nataliya Miropolskaya,
  • Andrey Aralov,
  • Yuri Khodarovich,
  • Vladimir Tsvetkov,
  • Sergey Kochetkov,
  • Vassili Lazarev,
  • Anna Varizhuk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232315281
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 23
p. 15281

Abstract

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The life cycle of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 includes several steps that are supposedly mediated by liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) of the viral nucleocapsid protein (N) and genomic RNA. To facilitate the rational design of LLPS-targeting therapeutics, we modeled N-RNA biomolecular condensates in vitro and analyzed their sensitivity to several small-molecule antivirals. The model condensates were obtained and visualized under physiological conditions using an optimized RNA sequence enriched with N-binding motifs. The antivirals were selected based on their presumed ability to compete with RNA for specific N sites or interfere with non-specific pi–pi/cation–pi interactions. The set of antivirals included fleximers, 5′-norcarbocyclic nucleoside analogs, and perylene-harboring nucleoside analogs as well as non-nucleoside amphiphilic and hydrophobic perylene derivatives. Most of these antivirals enhanced the formation of N-RNA condensates. Hydrophobic perylene derivatives and 5′-norcarbocyclic derivatives caused up to 50-fold and 15-fold enhancement, respectively. Molecular modeling data argue that hydrophobic compounds do not hamper specific N-RNA interactions and may promote non-specific ones. These findings shed light on the determinants of potent small-molecule modulators of viral LLPS.

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