Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal (Jan 2021)

Predicted structural mimicry of spike receptor-binding motifs from highly pathogenic human coronaviruses

  • Christopher A. Beaudoin,
  • Arian R. Jamasb,
  • Ali F. Alsulami,
  • Liviu Copoiu,
  • Andries J. van Tonder,
  • Sharif Hala,
  • Bridget P. Bannerman,
  • Sherine E. Thomas,
  • Sundeep Chaitanya Vedithi,
  • Pedro H.M. Torres,
  • Tom L. Blundell

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 3938 – 3953

Abstract

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Viruses often encode proteins that mimic host proteins in order to facilitate infection. Little work has been done to understand the potential mimicry of the SARS-CoV-2, SARS-CoV, and MERS-CoV spike proteins, particularly the receptor-binding motifs, which could be important in determining tropism and druggability of the virus. Peptide and epitope motifs have been detected on coronavirus spike proteins using sequence homology approaches; however, comparing the three-dimensional shape of the protein has been shown as more informative in predicting mimicry than sequence-based comparisons. Here, we use structural bioinformatics software to characterize potential mimicry of the three coronavirus spike protein receptor-binding motifs. We utilize sequence-independent alignment tools to compare structurally known protein models with the receptor-binding motifs and verify potential mimicked interactions with protein docking simulations. Both human and non-human proteins were returned for all three receptor-binding motifs. For example, all three were similar to several proteins containing EGF-like domains: some of which are endogenous to humans, such as thrombomodulin, and others exogenous, such as Plasmodium falciparum MSP-1. Similarity to human proteins may reveal which pathways the spike protein is co-opting, while analogous non-human proteins may indicate shared host interaction partners and overlapping antibody cross-reactivity. These findings can help guide experimental efforts to further understand potential interactions between human and coronavirus proteins.

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