Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B (Jul 2023)

SARS-CoV-2 spike host cell surface exposure promoted by a COPI sorting inhibitor

  • Yiqun Li,
  • Mingrui Yang,
  • Yanan Nan,
  • Jiaming Wang,
  • Sanjiao Wang,
  • Dongxiao Cui,
  • Jiajian Guo,
  • Pengfei He,
  • Wenxin Dai,
  • Shuqi Zhou,
  • Yue Zhang,
  • Wenfu Ma

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
pp. 3043 – 3053

Abstract

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Via an insufficient coat protein complex I (COPI) retrieval signal, the majority of SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) is resident in host early secretory organelles and a tiny amount is leaked out in cell surface. Only surface-exposed S can be recognized by B cell receptor (BCR) or anti-S therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that is the trigger step for B cell activation after S mRNA vaccination or infected cell clearance by S mAbs. Now, a drug strategy to promote S host surface exposure is absent. Here, we first combined structural and biochemical analysis to characterize S COPI sorting signals. A potent S COPI sorting inhibitor was then invented, evidently capable of promoting S surface exposure and facilitating infected cell clearance by S antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). Importantly, with the inhibitor as a probe, we revealed Omicron BA.1 S is less cell surface exposed than prototypes because of a constellation of S folding mutations, possibly corresponding to its ER chaperone association. Our findings not only suggest COPI is a druggable target against COVID-19, but also highlight SARS-CoV-2 evolution mechanism driven by S folding and trafficking mutations.

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